rkosiorek
100 kW
here ya'go
rick
rick
Those are fairly old as people in the for sale forum pointed out. At the prices your asking for them there definetly not worth it.rkosiorek said:I still have a couple of those Cornell Dublier 1F 20WVDC computer grade caps for sale if anyone is interested, pm me. pretty sure they will be right close to the 1F mark each with a reasonable ESR.
rick
terramir said:Those are fairly old as people in the for sale forum pointed out. At the prices your asking for them there definetly not worth it.
terramir
oops applogize I read a pm of one of my friends wrong, it wasn't in the for sale thread it was here:rkosiorek said:actually there is no comment in the for sale column. no replies at all. yours is the first such comment.
rick
rkosiorek said:i guess you also missed the post about actually charging and discharging them several times to verify the capacity. did it with 1k sesistors for a slow charge and with 0.25R for rapid discharge. not very scientific tests, but they do verify that they do hold a charge, are near to 1F actual capacity and do have a low ESR.
in this case your .02 worth is inflated.
Very very cool after I do the plain all the plain battery tabs I have to do(over 1000x2) I might just work on moding it into something like that, however I would need to still be able to use it as a just plain spot welder And well for a plain spot welder the code would need to be modified to output just one or two pulses that are longer in frequency , so a switch to vary from cut mode to single or dual pulse mode would be great. But I can't say anymore till I truely looked at the schematics, because this guy looks like he has an aweful (yes I'm in awe pardon the pun) lot of power 8) either he got really lucky with that car cap or he's supplying part of the welding power from his supply (talk about toasting a supply if the electrodes fuse on)gip_mad said:*aehm* did anyone see this link I posted early?
http://ultrakeet.com/index.php?id=article&name=cdWelder
Take a look at it, especially the nice video at the end of the page... Then tell me what you think about it!![]()
I was going to follow his example - no offense, your system is very good, works well and is simple and cheap, but I'm a control freak!![]()
Not saying they won't do for a welder, hey just put em in a box,(safety first) but the price is a bit hefty, considering the audio caps while very overrated if you get the right one's you'll get it done for lessrkosiorek said:with the .25R discharge i was trying more to measure capacity and verify the estimate i got by charging. i just didn't want to wait a half hour to do it. also i don't have any decent sized power resistors of a lower value. i did discover that a 16AWG wire makes a nice bright fuse though.
started at 13V a couple of days ago and still over 11V today. so i think i've done eough to verify basic function. these have not leaked or dried out. the ends have not bulged and they don't make any of the funny noises or smells that big electrolytics make before they fail.
I used 4 gauge stereo cable and 4 gauge bare wire from the home shmoo. also I used two hollowed out pens for the gripsrkosiorek said:now if i had a couple of SCR's bigger than 80A handy i might try a welder. might try it anyway. i still want to try the circuit using a parallel fet to deliver a timed pulse. be nice if i could find the electrodes i made a couple of years ago as well.
Yeah well I actually think the main part of his power comes from the supply itself. I'd be worried about overheating that whole setup as well, he definetly needs some short and overheating shutdown routines, I'd tried to e-mail him but it's bouncing.rkosiorek said:i did check out the video as well. takes a lot of juice to get those tungsten electrodes to heat up red hot that way. really impressive considering the simplicity of the hardware. i wonder if one of his unpublished software features is a shutdown routine in case of a short.
rick
The way that thing looks I suspect it's 2 0.6F to 1.5F stiffening caps and well about 4 farads worth of supercaps 6x25F in series in the middle. rip out the supercaps, and you'll have 1.2 to 3F of real low esr capacitance, this is what my welder is based on two parallel main stiffening caps out of a hybrid cap very simular to that one.caleb7777 said:
I hope it is 2 caps
Okies what brand of car cap is that there about to get a whole lot more business!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!Fritz said:Terramir, I have a Capacitor tester for my caps and this cap measures 2.97 Farad. I also look at the discharge times
with an oscilloscope and I can calculate the exact size of the cap.This cap is rated 20 volt and have a surge of 24volt. At 20 volt It has a current leak of about 3 amps but it works. It might have cost more than a $100 but it is still less than $6000I have posted an updated schematic about a week ago.