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Yes 1F. Mine are 6.5x10mm and all the one I find online are 8x12mm.
Dangit. 25 from there are the same price as 4 over sized one on e-bay. In the 2-4-4-2 tender I should have plenty of room for the bigger ones. For the Hiesler I'll just buy a new KA3.
Caps came in the mail today. Installed them and the KA3 still doesn't work. The black ground goes right to the row of caps and the blue wire goes through the circuit. I'm thinking the caps were fine and the problem is something else. Can I wire the blue wire right to the other end of the row of caps?
So instead of buying another KA3 I can just buy a bunch of caps.
As I mentioned earlier in this thread, there is more than just a resistor, diode and caps in the KA3. Exactly because 4 2.7V caps have 10.8V limit, there is a sort of voltage limiter in the circuit. It from what I see in Chris' photo I speculate that it is a transistor, resistor and a Zener diode (in addition to the other larger resistor and diode that John mentions). Most DCC boosters but out 12V or more, whic within the decoder can exceed the 10.8V the Super Caps are rated for. But if you use 5 series-connected caps rated 2.7V then you should be ok skipping the voltage limiter on the KA3 because that arrangement will be rated for 13.5V. That is how my older TCS KA2 is designed. But even KA2 has 2 diodes (one for charging, one for discharging, a current limiting resistor for charging, and a Zener diode for protection).
I thought DCC put AC to the rails and the decoder turned it into DC. Is that right?And you hook up the caps right where the bridge retifier turns it into DC.
Yep, I forgot about the zener for voltage protection when using low-voltage supercaps in a keep alive. Peteski, you had a diagram of a circuit for this somewhere on the forum, right?John C.