L
legg
Guest
On Fri, 25 May 2012 22:12:44 -0700, "Paul Hovnanian P.E."
<paul@hovnanian.com> wrote:
RL
<paul@hovnanian.com> wrote:
Small parts will use the whole can. Romove one end to view full body.spamtrap1888 wrote:
On May 25, 7:28 pm, "Paul Hovnanian P.E." <p...@hovnanian.com> wrote:
I've got an axial lead polarized cap with the following markings:
1K
50V
Its about 0.1 in diam x 0.3 in long
Now, I've seen 1K as a picofarad value, which would make this a 1nF cap.
But this thing is big compared to other caps of this rating. A .001uF 1KV
ceramic is much smaller. And this doesn't make sense in the circuit its
in.
In other contexts, the K letter code defines the tolerance. But that
usually follows a three digit value code.
So, what is it that I'm looking at? The cap is bad, or I'd throw it on a
meter and figure it out.
I'm going to take a SWAG and say the K stands for Kemet.
Could there be more markings on the rest of the package, or have you
already removed it from the circuit?
Not yet removed. Its kind of stuffed between other components, so if there's
something on the bottom, I'll have to pull it to check. But I'd be
surprised to see the polarity and voltage marked on one side (along with
this mystery code) and the value marked on the other. They usually put all
these attribute markings together and part numbers elsewhere. That's what
makes me think the 1K is value.
RL