Wester547 wrote:More ripple current -through- the capacitor would lead it to fail sooner than high ripple voltage (the ripple that "escapes" the output filtering and ends up at the load).
I wasn't saying the unit forces that much ripple voltage on the capacitor, I was saying that you could have that much ripple voltage (so long as it's the switching noise) going into the coil and still keep the ripple voltage after the coil in ATX spec.
With the 1000µF Teapo SC used, having, say 100mV
RMS (as opposed to peak-to-peak) on it (which, if it's a sine wave, will result in 283mV peak-to-peak - but I know ripple is never in the form of a sine wave) will push over an amp through it - and, therefore, it's finished. But if the filter following it works as it should, the outgoing ripple will not show any sign of a problem (for however long - or short - the overstressed cap survives).
Installing the Panasonic FR will cause the ripple voltage to drop, of course, and it will last longer, as the ripple current will stay about the same (more on that below).
Given the low-ish ripple current rating of that Teapo, using it in that position on a flyback meant to output 2A is a dubious design decision.
Though, in essence, what you're saying is if they used a +5VSB switch that worked at a higher switching frequency, that it would be easier on the output?
It would allow a smaller coil, but it wouldn't reduce the load on the capacitor before the coil.
As for ESR vs. ripple current flow...
Short version: Outside of the multiple-caps-in-parallel scenario, whoever told you that changing a cap for one with lower ESR will put it under more stress is wrong.
Long version: In flyback topology, the capacitor before the coil has to take a relatively fixed ripple current of up to half (?) the output current.
In forward and traditional half-bridge (LLC resonant is more complicated) configurations, the reactance of the big mag-amp coils is
monstrous compared to the ESR of the caps, so changing the specs of the caps has little effect on the ripple current through them - it's the ripple voltage that changes with them. Any increase in ripple current would be more than compensated by the higher current handling of the higher-grade capacitors.
The capacitors after the ferrite coils (pi refers to how the schematic arrangement of the caps on both sides of the coil, along with the coil itself, looks, not to the type of coil) in either arrangement are relatively unstressed - until the capacitors before the coils fail, forcing those after to take the load. If, of course, the capacitor before the coil is fine and that after it is bad...well, that tells a lot about its quality, doesn't it???
Aside from the switching noise, a degree of double-mains-frequency ripple often appears on some of the outputs - you can see it in the scope shots for +12V, +5V and -12V in this review. That passes "straight through" the secondary-side filtering and doesn't stress the caps (but the connected hardware won't take so well to it). It's the control loop's task to compensate for it, but only one output per transformer can truly be clear of it (in this unit, +3.3V). That's why the ripple voltage doesn't drop much with polys. Using buck converters for +3.3V and +5V, along with a linear regulator or buck-boost converter for -12V (as I suggested in the dream PSU thread), you could eliminate it. But no such fancy features on this unit.
It's barely possible that replacing caps with ones with too low ESR will result in an inadequately damped filter that will "ring" at its resonant frequency, and there are some other issues that could pop up. But the "lower ESR = more ripple current" suggestion is not it.
Information is far more fragile than the HDDs it's stored on. Being an afterthought is no excuse for a bad product.
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