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Solid capacitors vs electrolytic...anyone with an opinion either way?

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  #31  
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me@privacy.net
 
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Default Re: Solid capacitors vs electrolytic...anyone with an opinion either way? - 04-10-2007 , 08:47 AM









Rob Warnock wrote:
Quote:
me (AT) privacy (DOT) net> wrote:
+---------------
| Rob Warnock wrote:
| >Since almost *all* electronic device failures occur during power
| >transitions
|
| Evidence, please.
+---------------

Over 40 years of experience in the industry,
That's not evidence.

Has it been your experience that flashing LEDs fail more
quickly than alway-on LEDs? That resistors, diodes, etc.
that aren't at the edges of the rating evvelope fail much
more quickly when subjected to power on/off cycles?

Quote:
designing and manufacturing computers & related devices,
mainly, but also using them.
That's not evidence. And "computers" are a small subset of
"all electronic devices."

Quote:
Note, however, that I was *not* referring to devices with a
high component of mechanical motion such as fans or disk drives
[as another branch of this thread seemed to get fixated on].
One might argue that those are also part of "all electronic
devices", but I am inclined to assume that you meant pure
electronic rather than electromechanical. Clearly they have
differing failure mechanisms.

Quote:
I was referring primarily to printed circuit boards and the
non-moving parts normally mounted on them, such as chips,
capacitors, resistors, etc.
A 1/4 watt resistor that disssipates a constant 1/16 watt
(many resistors in opamp circuits dissipate far less than
that) will last about as long as one that cycles from 1/16
watt to 0 watts and back again. And when the latter does
fail it will be at a random time, not at the exact moment
the power transition happens.




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  #32  
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me@privacy.net
 
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Default Re: Solid capacitors vs electrolytic...anyone with an opinion either way? - 04-10-2007 , 08:51 AM









Rob Warnock wrote:

Quote:
Rob Warnock writes:

| >Since almost *all* electronic device failures occur during power
| >transitions.

for a large number/style of systems in a wide range of conditions,
frequent power cycling generally tends to result in less total
time before failure.
The latter claim is true. The former is false.


Quote:
There are exceptions, of course, at the extremes of operating regimes.
If you only turn your system on once a year for one hour per session,
it might very well last longer than my machines which run continuously.
But for myself, personally, I consider that operating regime to be
nearly useless. YMMV.

+---------------
| Also, I have seen a number of machine failures during power-on
| conditions, from stuck fans to dead RAM and dead disks.
+---------------

Uh... I didn't disagree with that. Whether frequently or infrequently
power-cycled, the most likely moment for a failure is during a
power-on event [and the second-most-likely is a power-off event].

But also see my other reply, where I mentioned that I wasn't
especially addressing devices with a high component of mechanical
motion or stress. Those have much more complex tradeoffs between
frequency of power-cycling, on-time per session, total on-time,
and MTBF. [Bearings dry out while running; seals dry out while
*not* running; "stiction" is aggravated by long "off" times; heads
can crash from overly-*short* "off" times (power flicks); etc.]

+---------------
| >A power cycle is stressful in two ways: voltage/current surges,
| >and temperature cycling. The latter is the more serious in the
| >long term but sets up the conditions for failure due to the
| >former.
|
| OTOH, power-on hours also take their toll on the electronics.
| For semiconductors, electromigration will eventually make the
| device fail;
+---------------

True, but for devices manufactured since the phemomenon of
electromigration was understood and (somewhat) mitigated against,
thermal cycling is probably a more serious stressor. The worst
case -- when both are active -- is a 95% "on" time with frequent
"off" cycles just long enough for the system to cool off.

+---------------
| for electrolytic capacitors, the liquid tends to evaporate faster
| with higher temperature, and they are hotter when the machine is
| powered on.
+---------------

Also somewhat true, though any machine which is operated at such
a high temperature that this is a dominant effect is in serious
danger from failing for many *other* reasons!! ;-} Under normal
"room-temperature" conditions with circuits designed not to overly-
stress the capacitors' A.C. current-handling rating [which is IME
a more-serious source of high temps in electrolytics than ambient
temp per se], thermal cycling is more likely to be the cause of
failure, e.g., by the cracking of seals or solder joints.

Though I will agree with you completely about those old *huge*
electrolytics that used to be used in large-computer linear
power supplies [back before switchers!], e.g., the 100,000 uF
16 V caps that were used in the DEC PDP-10 supplies. I used to
help run a PDP-10 that was in a small closed room with barely
adequate air conditioning. If the air conditioning failed --
which it sometimes did in the hot Atlanta summers -- and the
PDP-10 got hot enough for the internal thermal sensors to shut
the machine down, then, just like clockwork, about two weeks
(yes, weeks!) after the air conditioning outage one of those
monster caps would suddenly explode, spraying electrolyte all
over the place [and resulting in hours of DEC Field Circus time
to get it fixed]. We were convinced the failures were due to
the caps having dried out during the HVAC outage, causing the
A.C. impedance to go up, which caused the caps to continually
overheat later, which accelerated the aging in a runaway cycle
until... *BOOM*!

But modern desktop system mainboards don't contain those sorts
of "wet cell" electrolytics any more.


-Rob

-----
Rob Warnock <rpw3 (AT) rpw3 (DOT) org
627 26th Avenue <URL:http://rpw3.org/
San Mateo, CA 94403 (650)572-2607



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  #33  
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Robert Redelmeier
 
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Default Re: Solid capacitors vs electrolytic...anyone with an opinion either way? - 04-10-2007 , 08:55 AM



In comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.chips me (AT) privacy (DOT) net wrote in part:
Quote:
A 1/4 watt resistor that disssipates a constant 1/16 watt (many
resistors in opamp circuits dissipate far less than that) will
last about as long as one that cycles from 1/16 watt to 0 watts
and back again. And when the latter does fail it will be at a
random time, not at the exact moment the power transition happens.
Evidence, please. You cannot hold others to standards
without expecting to first comply with them yourself.

Furthermore, what evidence do you have that resistor
failures cause most device failures? They are easy to
find, but finding a failed resistor doesn't mean it caused
the failure. Resistor burnout is just as likely to have
resulted from some other initiating cause.

-- Robert





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  #34  
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me@privacy.net
 
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Default Re: Solid capacitors vs electrolytic...anyone with an opinion either way? - 04-11-2007 , 02:56 AM






Robert Redelmeier wrote:

Quote:
Furthermore, what evidence do you have that resistor
failures cause most device failures?
A resistor is an electronic device.

If you want to make an argument about the failure of
electronic systems instead of "all electronic devices"
please call them electronic systems, not electronic
devices. Note thet the original "all electronic devices"
claim was in the context of a discussion of capacitors,
which are devices, not systems.

Many electronic devices comprise an electronic system.
If the subset of devices that tend to fail at the moment
of power cycling fail far more often than the subset
that does not, then the system itself will reflect the
failure characteristics of the fail-on-power-cycle subset.
That seems like a very real possibility and a reasonable
argument. Rob Warnock's claim was (exact qoute) "almost
*all* electronic device failures occur during power
transitions" is quite simply not true.




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  #35  
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Robert Redelmeier
 
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Default Re: Solid capacitors vs electrolytic...anyone with an opinion either way? - 04-11-2007 , 08:09 AM



In comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.chips me (AT) privacy (DOT) net wrote in part:
Quote:
Robert Redelmeier wrote:
Furthermore, what evidence do you have that resistor
failures cause most device failures?

A resistor is an electronic device.
I see, you wish to argue semantics and terminology.
I'll indulge you, briefly:

First, a resistor is not an "electronic device" it is an electrical
part. electronics is a term reserved for semiconductors (perhaps
including tubes) where the unique behaviour of electron [holes]
(as opposed to current) is controlled

Second, a device is not a single simple part. Devices are
more complicated than parts but less complex than systems.

Quote:
Rob Warnock's claim was (exact qoute) "almost
*all* electronic device failures occur during power
transitions" is quite simply not true.
Oh, it what way? Please note, the clock may be considered
a power transition as well, especially in the predominant
CMOS technology.

-- Robert



Quote:


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  #36  
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Del Cecchi
 
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Default Re: Solid capacitors vs electrolytic...anyone with an opinion either way? - 04-11-2007 , 10:19 PM




"Robert Redelmeier" <redelm (AT) ev1 (DOT) net.invalid> wrote

Quote:
In comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.chips me (AT) privacy (DOT) net wrote in part:
Robert Redelmeier wrote:
Furthermore, what evidence do you have that resistor
failures cause most device failures?

A resistor is an electronic device.

I see, you wish to argue semantics and terminology.
I'll indulge you, briefly:

First, a resistor is not an "electronic device" it is an electrical
part. electronics is a term reserved for semiconductors (perhaps
including tubes) where the unique behaviour of electron [holes]
(as opposed to current) is controlled
Not at the company where I work. Nor at the school from which I
graduated.
Quote:
Second, a device is not a single simple part. Devices are
more complicated than parts but less complex than systems.
Again, not in my neck of the woods. Ever hear of the "one device cell" ?
I know you have.
Where is it you are located?
Quote:
Rob Warnock's claim was (exact qoute) "almost
*all* electronic device failures occur during power
transitions" is quite simply not true.
It may or may not be true depending on the device and its application.

Quote:
Oh, it what way? Please note, the clock may be considered
a power transition as well, especially in the predominant
CMOS technology.
Oh please.
Quote:
-- Robert








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  #37  
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Robert Redelmeier
 
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Default Re: Solid capacitors vs electrolytic...anyone with an opinion either way? - 04-13-2007 , 09:36 AM



In comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.chips Del Cecchi <delcecchiofthenorth (AT) gmail (DOT) com> wrote in part:
Quote:
Where is it you are located?
A place that is only now, slowly and grudgingly, switching
from relay logic to semiconductors for critical safety systems.

Welcome to my world.

-- Robert




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  #38  
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Jan Vorbrüggen
 
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Default Re: Solid capacitors vs electrolytic...anyone with an opinion eitherway? - 04-20-2007 , 08:52 AM



Quote:
Strangely, in my experience machines that are generally powered on all
the time seem to be more likely to fail when power cycled.
That has been my experience also. Nothing was more dreaded by our sysadmin at
the university than the biannual tests of emergency power supply to the
building: because this meant turning off all power, not only did he have to
shutdown and powerdown the whole network, he could count on average about
three PSUs (from several hundrer) dying in the process.

Jan


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