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#1
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AES sells NOS electrolytics and claim 'recently reformed' Would these
be any better than what's in the radio? I suppose years of using the capacitors is more likely to dry out the electrolyte than years of sitting on the shelf. Any comments? My boss gave me a bunch of 68uf/450v caps that I intend to hollow out the big shiny cans and stick my free caps in. It takes a little bit of time and epoxy, but worth it. 73 Bob N9NEO Just say NEO! |
#2
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Using any old electrolytic is a crapshoot. Why would you risk your expensive
power transformer running with original or "recently reformed" old capacitors? Burn up a couple of power trannies, as I have done to my dismay, and you will use only "NEW NEW NEW" electrolytics. The new caps are cheap and very reliable. And it's not hard to stuff them into the old containers, as you noted, if you want to preserve the original appearance. I could teach a 12-year old how to do it in 10 or 15 minutes. Regards, Phil Nelson Phil's Old Radios http://antiqueradio.org/index.html |
#3
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wrote:
AES sells NOS electrolytics and claim 'recently reformed' Would these be any better than what's in the radio? I suppose years of using the capacitors is more likely to dry out the electrolyte than years of sitting on the shelf. They will be better than failed capacitors. Beyond that, I would be extremely suspicious of them. My boss gave me a bunch of 68uf/450v caps that I intend to hollow out the big shiny cans and stick my free caps in. It takes a little bit of time and epoxy, but worth it. Free caps, as in free beer or free speech? --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#4
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Yeah, but 12-year-olds have better eyes and nimbler fingers.
Avery W3AVE Potomac, Md. |
#5
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While I agree with much that has been said about new caps being better,
AES has a fabulous reputation and I doubt they would risk it over some capacitors. If they fail, send it back and you'll probably get them replaced or money back. -- Gregg "t3h g33k" http://geek.scorpiorising.ca *Ratings are for transistors, tubes have guidelines* |
#6
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Gregg wrote:
While I agree with much that has been said about new caps being better, AES has a fabulous reputation and I doubt they would risk it over some capacitors. If they fail, send it back and you'll probably get them replaced or money back. Cool! Will they replace your transformer too? ;-) As long as the NOS capacitor is still wet inside, it should reform if you do it properly. Properly is with a power supply set to the WV, and a 1K (or higher) resistor in series with the cap. It should take less than 1 hour for the cap's current to drop to a few microamps. I have never had a cap that has been reformed this way fail. (It is, after all the way the manufacturer brought the cap up in the first place.) I have had plenty of failures when I try and cheat by bringing up the mains voltage slowly with a variac. -Chuck |
#7
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just dont send them any tubes as they have a problem with losing them and not paying.they used to have a good rep under
previous management. mit "Gregg" wrote in message ... | While I agree with much that has been said about new caps being better, | AES has a fabulous reputation and I doubt they would risk it over some | capacitors. If they fail, send it back and you'll probably get them | replaced or money back. | | | -- | Gregg "t3h g33k" | http://geek.scorpiorising.ca | *Ratings are for transistors, tubes have guidelines* |
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