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I've seen more than one problem with high-value ceramics causing problems
during operational vibe tests because of microphonics. In our case it usually seems to be the vibration causing capacitance change rather than true piezoelectricity, but it happens in any case. The last one that I remember we replaced the ceramic caps with back-to-back tantalums, in fact. Worked like a charm. "ddwyer" wrote in message ... In article , Fred writes "Jeroen" wrote in message ... John Larkin wrote: I think multilayer ceramics are pushing 100 uF these days. Yes, but alas, only with zero volts across them. Capacitance drops precipitously with DC bias. For a cap with Y5V dielectric, at half the rated DC voltage, there's only 10% of the initial capacitance left. Most manufacturers don't tell you. The high k types vary to +-10% and +20-80% from memory if full temp is allowed for. High K doped with piezo material, they can be heard to click if hit with a square wave. |
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