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Dave Burson wrote:
I still don't understand the need for 2 caps of such different values and voltage ratings. Has to do with the caps themselves. The large cap is for the 60 cycles (actually 50 to 133 cycles); while the smaller cap is for higher frequencies. I didn't see the power supply schematic - but dimes to donuts it's full wave- so the ripple frequency is double the AC line (110 to 120). That's likely to be phase-shifted a bit before reaching this circuit. The lamp runs on line frequency - and in combination with the ripple (riding on the B+) it'd be easy to generate some rather complex waveforms - with some pretty high harmonics. The large cap "eats" the lower frequncies - however - it's construction limits it's usefulness at higher frequencies - so there is the smaller one to deal with those. Look at most any power supply - you'll find smaller value caps by-passing the main filters. The voltage is insignificant (within reason). I'm sure the 25V was overkill (likely the highest voltage across the primary was 10V); but 25V was "common" back then (often found as the output tube cathode bypass cap). Since a .1 is seldom seen in lower than 150V - that value was probably stocked on the shelf as well. Even today - most .1 - even in solid state stuff - are seldom less than 50V. Just a matter of what was already on hand (big quantities of a common value are cheaper than a few "special" values even if those special values could be smaller). best regards... -- randy guttery A Tender Tale - a page dedicated to those Ships and Crews so vital to the United States Silent Service: http://tendertale.com |
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