0 Members and 2 Guests are viewing this topic.
Reading this makes me wonder about the "end-of-life" failures of the caps that survive the "burn-in" test.In the way of background, many manufafctured items have what is called a "bath tub curve" shape to their failure rates over time. That is, the failure rate starts pretty high, but goes down quickly with time-of-use, reaching a low, but non-zero rate after what is usually selected as the "burn-in" time for a particular type of item. That low rate may stay almost flat or may gradually increase over time until it starts increasing again at a substantial rate. The plotted curve looks like a bath tub, hense the name. The point at which the curve starts to increase at a substantial rate is usually picked as the end of service life, when the part should be replaced pre-emptively to avoid failures in-service.So far, this discussion has only addressed the burn-in aspect. What is the failure rate of those caps that have survived the burn-in? What is the expected service life for 95% of the (successfully burned-in) caps? Given the failure modes of these caps and the likely effect on a valuable model, it seems like it would be worth knowing these in-service risks before using cheap caps.
So, what I was asking is basically whether surviving a burn-in test is adequate insurance that the cheap caps won't still fail inside one of our models and destroy it sometime in our model's life.
Peteski, I understand the specs for electronic devices supplied by manufacturers for their products. But, I thought this thread was about "cheap" caps supplied by "somebody" in China who makes caps that don't seem to measure-up to the quality of other caps from reputable sources. I would not expect their caps to necessarily match the failure rates and normal service lives of the manufacturers who are providing such specs.So, what I was asking is basically whether surviving a burn-in test is adequate insurance that the cheap caps won't still fail inside one of our models and destroy it sometime in our model's life.