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  • Help ID this Electronic Part

    Dag nab it cat jumped on my work bench..............

    Anyways, help, where can I get one of these, what is it?

    Pictures show front & back sides
    Thanks



  • #2
    hi
    condensateur 470nf 63V

    olivier

    Comment


    • #3
      Just wanted to make sure

      It is what I thought, I am correct??
      Thanks again
      Mouser Part #: 539-168474J63H-F
      http://www.mouser.com/Search/Product...%252b7zmhic%3d

      Comment


      • #4
        Originally posted by SVEN1 View Post
        It is what I thought, I am correct??
        Thanks again
        Mouser Part #: 539-168474J63H-F
        http://www.mouser.com/Search/Product...%252b7zmhic%3d
        The Mouser Part looks like a perfect Replacement.

        Comment


        • #5
          Originally posted by SVEN1 View Post
          It is what I thought, I am correct??
          Thanks again
          Mouser Part #: 539-168474J63H-F
          http://www.mouser.com/Search/Product...%252b7zmhic%3d

          I'm not so sure about that value you were told. It looks like .047u (47nF) to me. It is NOT 470nF or .47uF.

          47j63 = 47nF, +/-5%, 63V

          So, it could be replaced with a 539-168473j63.

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          • #6
            I think it is u.47 is 0.47 is 470n .Grt Nakky.

            Comment


            • #7
              Originally posted by nakky View Post
              I think it is u.47 is 0.47 is 470n .Grt Nakky.
              You might be right.
              (darn sneaky the way they express powers of ten, decimal places and the like)

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              • #8
                I searched for Information about the CS4PI today.
                Take a good Look at the Capacitors... there is u47 and 47n.
                http://geotech1.com/forums/showpost....7&postcount=20

                Comment


                • #9
                  Originally posted by Götz von Berlichingen View Post
                  I searched for Information about the CS4PI today.
                  Take a good Look at the Capacitors... there is u47 and 47n.
                  http://geotech1.com/forums/showpost....7&postcount=20
                  Plain as day. You were right, I was wrong. I should have known better than to buck a concensus, but in my mind that "u47" looked like a slightly deformed "M47". (Ummh, bad glasses?)

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    u47j63

                    u47j63
                    .470uF = 470nF j63 = 63v bipolar Polyester film capacitors

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Thanks,
                      For a minute I thought I ordered the wrong part from Mouser.
                      I ordered the .47

                      Found a site that helped clear the issue.
                      http://www.hqelektronik.hu/info/en/c470n___63_mkt1.html

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Originally posted by SVEN1 View Post
                        Dag nab it cat jumped on my work bench..............

                        Anyways, help, where can I get one of these, what is it?

                        Pictures show front & back sides
                        Thanks


                        quite easy and already answered I see.... but tolerance ??? : 0.47 uF (= 470nF), 63V, +-5% tolerance - poly cap

                        Kind regards,
                        Max

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Off the top off my (fuzzy) head sometimes these codes are used for capacitor tolerances:
                          G=1% (??? not shure)
                          H=2%
                          J=5%
                          K=10%
                          M=20%
                          I don't know if this is world-wide standard but I'm pretty sure it's valid in US and parts of Europe

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Originally posted by porkluvr View Post
                            Off the top off my (fuzzy) head sometimes these codes are used for capacitor tolerances:
                            G=1% (??? not shure)
                            H=2%
                            J=5%
                            K=10%
                            M=20%
                            I don't know if this is world-wide standard but I'm pretty sure it's valid in US and parts of Europe

                            Hi,
                            yes it is. J,K,M are most common in cheap parts. All US, Western Europe and Japan made parts follow that rules for tolerance.

                            Of course, today, most of that things like poly caps are distributed around the world by big companies but big part are made in China... for obvious reasons!

                            Plastic melting is not exactly what we call ecologic way to electronics....

                            But sure "someone" else in the silicon valley is not much more clean ... I mean they waste tons of water per chip produced ! Guess who....

                            Kind regards,
                            Max

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Found out that it is 5%

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