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  • Schematic Notation Help

    Hello all, I have a question regarding an OLD schematic. There is a capacitor value of 100 uuF.

    Now, is that micro-micro Farad or is it actually, milli (m) ?

    Thanks,

    Yama
    Last edited by tboy; 04-01-2008, 07:48 PM. Reason: removed unneeded html

  • #2
    Hi Yama,

    it's micro-micro-Farad, the same as today's picofarad.

    HTH
    Albert

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    • #3
      Thanks Albert!

      I figured, since the whole IEEE standards industry probably wasn't as 'standard' back in 1960 (schematic era) as it is today.

      Thanks again for backing my logic up. This board is priceless.

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      • #4
        Back in the 1950s, which was when I learned, we were taught terms like pico and nano, but they were not used. micro-microfarads - uuf - mmf, were indeed just todays picofarad. A lot of hams would refer to that as "mickey mouse", as in "I slapped a 47 mickey mouse cap across my dipole to..." Older times we used m instead of u. So .047mf instead of .047uf, and 47mmf instead of 47uuf.

        Eventually uuf took over from mmf. I think largely because m meant milli on other places. And while milli-millifarad didn't make a lot of sense, a millifarad was possible. The very idea of a cap being 1 whole farad was just crazy back then. Now of course they install them in car stereos.

        Nanofarads seems to me to be a fairly recent thing. I started seeing nano a while back and it is here to stay I guess, though I think I still see .001uf or 1000pf more often than 1nf.
        Education is what you're left with after you have forgotten what you have learned.

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        • #5
          Oh and welcome to the board Yama and Hi from Lansing
          Education is what you're left with after you have forgotten what you have learned.

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