Farad
farad is the unit for capacitance in SI system. If one volt is developed as one coulomb charge is placed then capacitance has to be one farad. But one farad is enormous large one so practically speaking we use only micro farad, nano farad and pico farad. They are respectively 10-6 F, 10-9 F and 10-12 F
The equivalent capacitance of a 30uF capacitor in parallel with a 20uF capacitor is 50uF.
1 microfarad (μF) is equivilent to one-millionth (10-6) of a farad. Therefore, 1F = 0.000001μF :)
micro farad
Farad
farad is the unit for capacitance in SI system. If one volt is developed as one coulomb charge is placed then capacitance has to be one farad. But one farad is enormous large one so practically speaking we use only micro farad, nano farad and pico farad. They are respectively 10-6 F, 10-9 F and 10-12 F
I read that it 500 rms to 1 Farad.
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.
The Farad, of capacitance.
A Farad is the electrical unit of capacitance. Many commonly used capacitors (also known as condensors) are measured in micro-Farads (μF). A micro-Farad is one millionth of a Farad. To convert from micro-Farads to Farads, divide the micro-Farad value by one million. 2 micro-farads = 0.000002 Farads.
The Farad is a measure of how much electric charge is accumulated on the capacitor. Named after Michael Faraday
about 500 uF
The SI unit of capacitance is the farad. 1 farad is 1 coulomb per volt.
Farad is the basic unit for capacitance. The MFD is an abbreviation for microfarad, which is one-millionth of a farad. The capacitance of a 50 MFD capacitor is one 50 millionth of a farad.
500K is 500 000 µ Farad so it's ½ a Farad
It you mean a cap then it's 1 farad for every 1000 watts. So you would want a 1.5 farad cap. Or a 2 farad would work as well.