No! This is a term for capacitance. A capacitor will store a voltage up to it's breakdown limit plus cause a voltage reaction to a following circuit.
Yes you can do it. more voltage is good, a little more capacitance is good. Be sure to use a good quality capacitor. Note: on the old capacitor, it might be stated the temperature ratings such as 85 deg. C, 105 deg C, etc. Observe this as well. Higher is better.
It should work okay as long as voltage rating is equal to or greater than the capacitor you are replacing.
The same as the time constant of a 2.7 microfarad capacitor and a 33 ohm resistor connected in series.
The unit of capacitor is farad. 1 farad =10 to the power of 6 microfarad and also = 10 to the power of 12 picofarad Therfore if you are replacing one picofarad capcitor into one microfarad capacitor you are increasing the capcitance to 1000000 times. If it is in an oscillator circuit you are changing the frequency drastically which will be of no use.
Not a good idea, without knowing more about the circuit in which it's installed. Presumably, the 440v capacitor was selected because its max voltage rating (440v) is higher than the instantaneous voltage to be expected at that point in the circuit. By that criterion, the voltage at that point in the circuit may exceed 370 volts, and your proposed replacement component won't hold it.
uF is a measurment in electronics called Microfarad. You will typically see uF on Capacitors for example 400Volt 150uf would be a capacitor rated at 400 volts and 150 microfarad.
In most cases, yes. Unless you're in some high precision device, you're probably working with a 5-10% tolerance which would allow a 15-30 microfarad variance. Even a 1% tolerance would give you 3 microfarads. You can go with the same or higher voltage rating, just not lower.
Farad = Coloumb / Volt; solving for Coloumb, you get Coloumb = Farad x Volt. Just plug in the numbers - 1 microfarad is a millionth farad; 0.001 microfarad - if that is what you mean - is 0.000000001 Farad; wherease 1 KV = 1000 Volts.
30 microfarads
It is a rating that is used to size capacitors in microfarad. MFD is an acronym for the word microfarad.
Zero watts can be installed in 1000 micro farads. Watts are the product of amperage times volts. Micro farads is a value used in talking about capacitance.
On the list that you posted with the question, there are no items that designate a 7 microfarad capacitor.
Yes you can do it. more voltage is good, a little more capacitance is good. Be sure to use a good quality capacitor. Note: on the old capacitor, it might be stated the temperature ratings such as 85 deg. C, 105 deg C, etc. Observe this as well. Higher is better.
1000
* For every liter, there are exactly 1000000000 nanoliters. * For every nanoliter, there are 1.0X10-9 liters
1K = 1uF
1000000 microfarad