0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
The large orange component is in fact a SMD tantalum capacitor It doesn't seem to have polarity marking because (to maximize capacitance per square millimeter) these do not have a typical epoxy resin case with solder pads. If you notice, one metal end has a dimple in the center. That indicates the positive side. To be syre you can also put the loco (with the shall removed) on a live DCC track, then connect a DC voltmeter to the metal ends of the cap. If the and the meter reads positive voltage, then you just identified which end is positive. It will also tell you the voltage across the cap.Keep in mind that this might not be a "stay alive" cap you would see across the output of the decoder's bridge rectifier. It might be a filter cap for some other internally generated voltage. In that case, attaching a keep-alive to it would not yield the results you are looking for.Here is a handy photo taken from https://electronics.stackexchange.com/questions/35480/polarity-of-unmarked-smt-electrolytic-capacitor
Does that decoder have an antenna?
Assuming that this is "the" capacitor right behind the bridge rectifier, you can leave it, and add more capacitors in parallel with it. Connecting anyt capacitors in parallel results in total capacitance being a sum of all the capacitors.
Is there a way to determine the capacitance of the cap that Broadway used with this decoder? Or any cap for that matter?