Capacitor charging
just unhook your fuse up front, wire everything up and reinstall your fuse. there will be a spark and now your cap is charged. or you can use be between a 60-100 ohm resistor or it will take forever.
Originally posted by Alex053
just unhook your fuse up front, wire everything up and reinstall your fuse. there will be a spark and now your cap is charged. or you can use be between a 60-100 ohm resistor or it will take forever.
just unhook your fuse up front, wire everything up and reinstall your fuse. there will be a spark and now your cap is charged. or you can use be between a 60-100 ohm resistor or it will take forever.
If I were you, I'd goto REadio SHack, buy 1 pack (i thknk you get 5 R's per pack) of 600 Ohms, and twist all the ends together, this way you get a fast charge/discharge and you wont exceed the power ratings of those 1/10th W resistors.
Guys, I'm bringing this post back from the dead because I really, really need to find out what ohm resistor i need to discharge my 1 farad cap.
A pic of the resistor would do fine too.. i can id it by the color scheme..
thanks..
A pic of the resistor would do fine too.. i can id it by the color scheme..
thanks..
I think you should just use a light, that'd be the easiest way. Just connect it in series and hook it up to the battery. It'll go out when it's fully charged.
If you really want a resistor.. they already answered your question above.
If you really want a resistor.. they already answered your question above.
I dont want to "charge" the cap. I need to "discharge" it.
And I ask because I am getting mixed opinions on the proper ohm resistor.
One person said a 1k resistor
another one said 60 - 100 ohm
and the last one said 600 ohm..
that a pretty large range and I dont want to damage the cap.
thanks
And I ask because I am getting mixed opinions on the proper ohm resistor.
One person said a 1k resistor
another one said 60 - 100 ohm
and the last one said 600 ohm..
that a pretty large range and I dont want to damage the cap.
thanks
Originally posted by Ed
I think you should just use a light, that'd be the easiest way. Just connect it in series and hook it up to the battery. It'll go out when it's fully charged.
If you really want a resistor.. they already answered your question above.
I think you should just use a light, that'd be the easiest way. Just connect it in series and hook it up to the battery. It'll go out when it's fully charged.
If you really want a resistor.. they already answered your question above.
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