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#1 |
New Member
Join Date: Apr 2019
City & State: victoria mahe
My Country: seychelles
Line Voltage: 240
I'm a: Knowledge Seeker
Posts: 13
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![]() Hi all,
I need your advice. -SAMXON 2200uf 50V tested 0.00 esr on Dick Smith Blue Esr meter and 2027 ohm on FLUKE 179 multimeter. -Is this esr reading realistic? Thank you |
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#2 |
Great Sage 齊天大聖
Join Date: Dec 2009
City & State: Europe
My Country: some shithole run by Israeli agents
I'm a: Professional Tech
Posts: 29,107
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![]() no,
the fluke cant read esr, esr is done using AC current. the fluke is telling you the cap has internal leakage if you read capacitance it will probably be well over what it should be. |
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#3 |
Badcaps Veteran
Join Date: Dec 2010
City & State: Alberta
My Country: Canada
Posts: 3,245
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![]() Typical 2,200uF 50V cap has ESR from around 0.264Ω-0.030Ω for low ESR types.
If the cap has 40V on it with 2,207 ohms leakage... that is 0.8W which is a problem. Check your Blue ESR meter is working using a resistor, like 1Ω or 0.5Ω It does not use AC, but instead a DC pulse of 0.5mA, 5.0mA or 50mA depending on range. I have trouble testing with these cheap Asian caps, the electrolyte acts like a lead-acid battery lol then you add corrosion. High leakage current and you need an AC test (dual slope) to measure capacitance. I'm not sure what the Fluke 179 is doing, the 87-V is single slope I thought. |
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