Putting an electrolytic capacitor in the wrong orientation (reverse polarity) can lead to several bad outcomes—sometimes instantly, sometimes after a short delay.
⚠️ What actually happens:
1. Internal breakdown
- Electrolytic capacitors rely on a thin oxide layer that only works in one direction.
- Reverse voltage destroys this layer → the capacitor starts conducting like a short circuit.
2. Rapid heating
- As current flows the wrong way, the capacitor heats up quickly.
- This can damage nearby components too.
3. Gas buildup
- Inside the capacitor, chemical reactions produce gas.
- Pressure builds up because the capacitor is sealed.
4. Venting or explosion π₯
- Best case: the safety vent opens and it leaks electrolyte (messy, smells bad).
- Worst case: it explodes, sometimes quite violently.
⏱️ How fast does it fail?
- Instantly if the voltage is high enough.
- Seconds to minutes at lower voltages.
- Rarely, it may appear to “work” briefly before failing.
π₯ Signs it’s installed wrong:
- Bulging top
- Hissing sound
- Leakage (brown/black fluid)
- Burning smell
- Circuit not working properly
⚡ Bottom line:
Reversing an electrolytic capacitor is not just “it won’t work”—it can damage your circuit and be dangerous.


Burning smell
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