j_martin
Admiral
- Joined
- Sep 22, 2006
- Messages
- 7,474
Re: 1970 1150 rectifier or "radio shack full wave"??
With about 70 volts overhead, it doesn't make a bit of differenct except for heat generated. Silicon generates more heat, but runs well at much higher temperatures than germanium, thus germanium is considered obsolete except in some very specialized applications.
Selenium ages poorly, is big, and was obsoleted by silicon 40 years ago.
hope it helps
John
As far as I recall the semiconductors are silicon and germanium. Silicon will yeild a .7v drop across the junction and germanium will drop .3v across the junction. In a full wave bridge rectifier you have 4 diodes and are always flowing thru 2 at a time so if the rectifier was silicon you would lose 1.4v at the output and .6 if it were germanium. Didn't know selenium could be used and therefore have no idea what the voltage drop accross that junction would be.
With about 70 volts overhead, it doesn't make a bit of differenct except for heat generated. Silicon generates more heat, but runs well at much higher temperatures than germanium, thus germanium is considered obsolete except in some very specialized applications.
Selenium ages poorly, is big, and was obsoleted by silicon 40 years ago.
hope it helps
John