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I have seen those relatively new digital capacitors on the market. I mean the ones that look like a amplifier, not monitor top caps. Are they any good? How do they work?

2007-02-16 09:58:07 · 2 answers · asked by steak n' eggs 2 in Cars & Transportation Car Audio

Here is a link to what I mean.
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=180086596756&ssPageName=MERC_VI_RUPX_Pr12_PcY_BIN_Stores_IT&refitem=180085729489&itemcount=12&refwidgetloc=active_view_item&usedrule1=UpSell_LogicX&refwidgettype=cross_promot_widget

or type in "50 farad digital capacitor" in the ebay search window.

2007-02-16 12:38:17 · update #1

2 answers

A modified regular capacitor (temporary current/voltage storage device) to provide an extra voltage 'boost' when required... I gather a normal analog capacitor with a voltage-monitoring device controlling it which only 'cuts in' when power peaks require it (to save draining of your regular electrical system which may cause light dimming etc).... as the caps are analog, they should be fine.

2007-02-16 10:07:32 · answer #1 · answered by waynebudd 6 · 0 0

The only thing that makes it digital is the dispaly, nothing else.

2007-02-16 18:30:17 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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