Condenser resistance
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Great day!
I can not seem to find the correct resistance for the condenser, both mine are non vacuum. 25D and 43D.
One which seams dead slowly rises to 30k, then drops to zero.
Known good used one, up to 38k and stays high
New larger 300k stays high
hoping your having fun!
I can not seem to find the correct resistance for the condenser, both mine are non vacuum. 25D and 43D.
One which seams dead slowly rises to 30k, then drops to zero.
Known good used one, up to 38k and stays high
New larger 300k stays high
hoping your having fun!
Born, and brought home from the hospital (no seat belt (wtf)) in a baby!
Find out where the limits are, and start from there
Love your Mother
Earth
Find out where the limits are, and start from there
Love your Mother
Earth
-
h20hamelan - Coveted Fifth Gear
- Posts: 1962
- Joined: 25 Sep 2010
h20hamelan wrote:Great day!
I can not seem to find the correct resistance for the condenser, both mine are non vacuum. 25D and 43D.
One which seams dead slowly rises to 30k, then drops to zero.
Known good used one, up to 38k and stays high
New larger 300k stays high
hoping your having fun!
Condensors do not have resistance as we know it, What you are measuring is a rise followed by a decay but rather than burble on, here is what the Internet states.
https://www.electricaltechnology.org/20 ... gital.html
- Slowtus
- Third Gear
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- Joined: 22 Sep 2017
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