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You need more than that, Colin. You need many years experience.That's why you need to do a 2 week course to become a fully qualified electronics engineer.
Unless the actual description of the capacitor is given in the Bill Of Materials, the only way to work out the type and rating for the capacitor is from your own skills as an electronics engineer.
That's why you need to do a 2 week course to become a fully qualified electronics engineer.
Yes, caps can have series resistance & inductance. They also have shunt resistance since no insulator is perfect - except perhaps a vacuum.vead,
I don't understand this part of your post. "ceramic capacitor is useful when we need a low series resistance and low losses at high frequencies." Do you mean that ceramic caps give impedace and not pure reactance?
In order to measure the resistance of the dielectric, you would need a meter that can read VERY high resistances. Analogue multimeters would have no hope, & a DMM is unlikely to be able to read it either.Len,
I have tried measuring the resistance of the capacitors i have at hand with an analog multitester. I set the tester in the ohmmeter function (x1), but did not see any deflection in the pointer. That's why I assumed that the cap is purely reactive and has no resistance. But thank you for the information. I know that the capacitor is made up of plates and between these plates is a dielectric which is an insulator. I agree that no dielectric is perfect.
Unless the actual description of the capacitor is given in the Bill Of Materials, the only way to work out the type and rating for the capacitor is from your own skills as an electronics engineer.
That's why you need to do a 2 week course to become a fully qualified electronics engineer.