Electronic – Are there short-circuit-proof electrolytic capacitors

capacitor

For my studio photography I have a set of Prolinca strobes rated at 500 Ws. They fire in 1/2000 of a second, meaning that they deliver \$\frac{500 J}{1/2000 s}=1MW\$ for a jiffy. (No wonder that this causes a rather loud "clac" sound.)
I've always wondered how the capacitors can survive this. Are there electrolytic capacitors which allow repeated shorting?

(If the caps work at rectified 230V they must be 10 000\$\mu\$F to store 500J)

Best Answer

There are capacitors designed for flash-bulbs, they can withstand higher currents but still probably not shorts.

These lamps are not shorts, for 1/2000s peak current must be somewhere at 4000A, which means for 230V resistance should be 47mOhm, so good caps in parallel might have lower resistance, and dissipate most of power in wires, connections and lamp itself.

You may add inductor in series with your lamp to limit peak current.

I am working on similar problem - I've got 2x 2000J flash-lamps (used in Russian aircrafts), and already bought a bag of capacitors for them - going to try it soon :-)