On Thu, 22 Jan 2004 18:12:20 GMT, "Ken Finney"
wrote:
"John Larkin" wrote in
message ...
On Wed, 21 Jan 2004 22:21:31 -0800, "Tim Wescott"
wrote:
I wouldn't assume that just because your test equipment comes to you
broken
is a result of tantalum caps -- perhaps your sample is skewed by buying
at
hamfests instead of burgling active technology companies? Maybe if you
only
acquired your home entertainment equipment from dumpsters you'd conclude
that aluminum electrolytics are bad?
I recently escaped from a company that does aero (but not space) systems.
They get mounted on aircraft and are expected to survive being shipped in
an
unpressurized cargo hold at 50000 feet. At that altitude a wet aluminum
electrolytic will dry out, but a tantalum will be fine. There are even
wet-slug tantalums for high-altitude applications that will not dry out
at
these altitudes.
Wet-slug tants are expensive (do they still have silver cases?) but
don't blow up like the dry ones. The dry slugs coat the sintered
tantalum (fuel) with MnO2 (oxidizer).
snip
Silver cased wet slug tantalums DO explode, most contracts that
allow the use of wet slugs require the use of tantalum cased parts.
Sure, any cap will explode if you dump enough energy into it. The
difference is that the dry Ta:MnO2 guys only need a tiny bit of energy
to ignite, then chemically explode on their own. Just a high dV/dT
will set one off.
John
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