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Motors with capacitors 1

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roozle

Mechanical
Jun 11, 2001
28
Can somebody please explain to me, what the reason for installing a capacitor to the terminals of a DC motor.??

Is it somthing to do with suppression or modification of terminal resistance.??

Thanks and best regards,
Russell......

 
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If the capacitors are small the reason fo installing them might be EMI-reduction.
 
electricuwe - would that be reduction of voltage spikes during switching?
 
I've most often heard of capacitors being installed on motors for power factor correction.
 
power factor correction for dc? I can't buy that one.

What about a universal motor intended for either ac and dc.... would it possibly have a starting capacitor? (I'm not too familiar with them).

still wondering whether electricuwe was talking about emi during starting or running.
 
Mechanical commuation by the commutator causes spikes similar to electronic switching. At least for small DC-motors it is common to add some small capacitors to avoid RFI.
 
Pete... A universal (drill, vacuum)motor needs no cap for starting. You could put a cap across the line with the motor for the spikes as Electricuwe points out.
 

As a kid, it was virtually impossible to find a mil-surplus DC motor that did not have a <1ìfd &quot;bathtub&quot; capacitor strapped across its power terminals.
 
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