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#1
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I'm starting my first refurbishment of an old receiver.
Even before I power up I want to replace the electrolytics based on age degradation principles. [I'm a retired EE and understand age degradation in 40+ year old capacitors]]. Being away from parts suppliers for 10+ years leaves me ignorant of what is where. Therefore my original question: "What is a good source for electrolytics?"] /S/ DD, W1MCE |
#2
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Dave, You have some choices. Antique Electronic Supply and Surplus
Sales of Nebraska both offer said-to-be-new can-type electrolytics at very high (relatively speaking) prices. If below the chassis esthetics are of less importance, leave the cans in place and wire around them using an appropriate value replacement, one typical brand being axial-lead XICONs. Mouser has the best price on these. Also available are "snap-in" type computer caps. No leads on these, of course, just tabs. The third possibility is to remove the offending can capacitor, gut it and re-stuff with one of the new, smaller types. Personally, I below chassis wire in XICONs. But, it all depends on what your pleasure is. de Jeep/K3HVG Dave wrote: I'm starting my first refurbishment of an old receiver. Even before I power up I want to replace the electrolytics based on age degradation principles. [I'm a retired EE and understand age degradation in 40+ year old capacitors]]. Being away from parts suppliers for 10+ years leaves me ignorant of what is where. Therefore my original question: "What is a good source for electrolytics?"] /S/ DD, W1MCE |
#3
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Dave wrote:
I'm starting my first refurbishment of an old receiver. Even before I power up I want to replace the electrolytics based on age degradation principles. [I'm a retired EE and understand age degradation in 40+ year old capacitors]]. Before you go to the trouble of replacing the electrolytics, you really ought to reform them. If they are still moist inside, they will usually reform to like new characteristics... If you don't first ruin them by turning the radio on. To reform, you need a DC supply at the WV rating of the capacitor, and a 2K 5W series resistor to limit current. If your supply has a roll back current limit pot, you can set that to a few tens of milliamps instead. It usually only takes a half hour to reform a cap. You can tell how you are doing by what happens with the current. The current should drop to near zero. -Chuck |
#4
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Dave wrote:
Even before I power up I want to replace the electrolytics based on age degradation principles. [I'm a retired EE and understand age degradation in 40+ year old capacitors]]. Being away from parts suppliers for 10+ years leaves me ignorant of what is where. Therefore my original question: "What is a good source for electrolytics?"] Digi-Key, Mouser, and when you absolutely need can caps, Antique Electronics Supply. A phone call to 1-800-DIGI-KEY for a catalogue will be an eye-opener if you remember what their catalogue was like ten years ago. These days it's bigger than Newark or Allied. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#5
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Dave wrote:
I'm starting my first refurbishment of an old receiver. Even before I power up I want to replace the electrolytics based on age degradation principles. [I'm a retired EE and understand age degradation in 40+ year old capacitors]]. Being away from parts suppliers for 10+ years leaves me ignorant of what is where. Therefore my original question: "What is a good source for electrolytics?"] /S/ DD, W1MCE Hi Dave, If you don't find what you need surplus, www.jameco.com has better prices on most than www.mouser.com A couple others to compare with would be www.alliedelec.com or www.newark.com . I often find what I need from some of the places that buy excess inventory from manufacturers but do watch their prices. Sometimes they are more expensive than just ordering new. You can check out www.allelectronics.com www.alltronics.com or www.mpja.com Good luck on your project! Paul WD8OSU |
#6
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TOP POSTED ... UGH! But pls forgive me.
TU for the 4 replies. Gets me going in a good direction. /s/ DD, W1MCE Dave wrote: I'm starting my first refurbishment of an old receiver. Even before I power up I want to replace the electrolytics based on age degradation principles. [I'm a retired EE and understand age degradation in 40+ year old capacitors]]. Being away from parts suppliers for 10+ years leaves me ignorant of what is where. Therefore my original question: "What is a good source for electrolytics?"] /S/ DD, W1MCE |
#7
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People can honestly disagree about reforming, but personally I have had poor
luck with it. Some caps will reform, but I found that they were not reliable for the long haul. Why risk frying an expensive power transformer just to save a few bucks worth of electrolytics? Phil Nelson |
#8
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Phil Nelson wrote:
People can honestly disagree about reforming, but personally I have had poor luck with it. Some caps will reform, but I found that they were not reliable for the long haul. Why risk frying an expensive power transformer just to save a few bucks worth of electrolytics? Why risk frying an expensive power transformer by turning on an antique radio? If you reform the caps the way I said to, you will know before you finish if the cap is going to be good for the long haul. I have never had one fail that correctly went through a reformation. That said, I have lost electrolytics when I have tried the trick of using a variac to "reform" the whole power supply before applying full mains voltage. I am quite sure that most of them would have reformed correctly if I hadn't skimped on the process. -Chuck |
#9
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![]() "Chuck Harris" wrote in message ... Phil Nelson wrote: People can honestly disagree about reforming, but personally I have had poor luck with it. Some caps will reform, but I found that they were not reliable for the long haul. Why risk frying an expensive power transformer just to save a few bucks worth of electrolytics? Why risk frying an expensive power transformer by turning on an antique radio? If you reform the caps the way I said to, you will know before you finish if the cap is going to be good for the long haul. I have never had one fail that correctly went through a reformation. That said, I have lost electrolytics when I have tried the trick of using a variac to "reform" the whole power supply before applying full mains voltage. I am quite sure that most of them would have reformed correctly if I hadn't skimped on the process. -Chuck If I'm going to go to all the trouble to remove a cap I'm going to replace it not play patty cake with it and take chances -- Clif Holland KA5IPF www.avvid.com |
#10
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Clif Holland wrote:
"Chuck Harris" wrote in message That said, I have lost electrolytics when I have tried the trick of using a variac to "reform" the whole power supply before applying full mains voltage. I am quite sure that most of them would have reformed correctly if I hadn't skimped on the process. -Chuck If I'm going to go to all the trouble to remove a cap I'm going to replace it not play patty cake with it and take chances Why would you remove the cap to reform it? On tube circuits, you can do the job in place, just don't fire up the filaments. The important point to reforming is that you don't supply buckets of current to the subject capacitor. If you do, the capacitor will create little localized hot-spots where the oxide is too thin. -Chuck |
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