On 03/17/2013 02:07 PM, Chuck Guzis wrote:
A year or
so ago, when I was working on a new design for work, Dan
Roganti noticed that I had designed in some tantalum capacitors in a
switching regulator. He razzed me pretty good about it, and talked me
into investigating some of the newer low-ESR high-capacitance-per-volume
capacitor technologies. I've since been using some really fantastic
aluminum organic polymer capacitors. They're cheaper than the tantalums
(tantala?), they do not contain a liquid electrolyte (which means they
cannot boil and burst, hence no "K" scoring on the top) and their ESR is
almost unbelievably low.
Yes, great stuff making its appearance in a lot of new gear. However,
the range of values seems to be quite limited for through-hole (radial
wire leads) devices in comparison to what's available in SMT.
I suppose that's only to be expected.
Yes, but many of them are what I call "pseudo-SMT" packages, which are
basically radial-lead metal cans with wires coming out of them in the
normal sense, but they've been flattened out and made horizontal for SMT
soldering. They can be bent back out. :-) It's a bit kludgy, but I can
see situations where it'd work for replacement of through-hole parts.
-Dave
--
Dave McGuire, AK4HZ
New Kensington, PA