This was discussed long ago and linked here - check out the third post…
https://gearspace.com/board/geekzone/356482-easy-diy-passive-filter.html
https://gearspace.com/board/geekzone/356482-easy-diy-passive-filter.html
63VDC would probably do. As you say there is no dc there but there is ac (the signal) so the ac rating is important. 40VAC rating is usually sufficient.Ahhh okay I dont know why I couldn't find those but with the part number there it is!
Also I deleted the post you were responding to because I realized what I had drawn up would have the exact opposite effect I was thinking! Thanks for the datasheet!
Would 63VDC be acceptable? I dont think there would be any DC after the output transformer.. is that correct?
Sweet thank you! I found some Wima's that work. They're kind of chunky (11mm wide) but I got them on my board layout no problem!63VDC would probably do. As you say there is no dc there but there is ac (the signal) so the ac rating is important. 40VAC rating is usually sufficient.
Cheers
Ian
So with this logic, does this layout look correct? I have it routed so that switch on routes the signal thru the caps -> output trim and with it off the signal goes straight from the tx to the output trim. And I've doubled the value of the caps to account for the caps being in series with each other in context of the signal.is a reasonable assumption they are intended to look like a 600 ohm load. So use 600 ohms as R and set the frequency to 80Hz and out will pop the capacitor value
Old school designers always breadboard new/different circuits to confirm.Sweet thank you!! I'll try to breadboard just to confirm.
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