OK this is about very old coupling caps in restoration jobs, amps maybe 50 yrs old. I'm finding that whilst some brands are always good, others always leak lots of DC. That 'always' thing is interesting, saves me some time, and may be useful, so I'd like to check my experience against yours to see I'm not making false assumptions..
I have recently taken on some restoration jobs on imported USA Ami jukebox amps, valve amps around 40-50 years old. They tend to use a brand of poly (I guess) coupling cap called 'Tiny Chief'. Red cylinders over 1" long (ie not very Tiny) cased in some kind of plastic, cast rather than dipped, with nice clear yellow printing. Values in the usual range .001uf to .1uF. Initially I test them by putting 75vdc from my power supply on one end, and seeing how much dc gets through to put dc voltage on the other end relative to the supply's negative side. These Tiny Chiefs all act the same - they show almost the full voltage at first, then as they charge, taking about 30 seconds to a minute, the voltage very slowly drops to something in the range 5-8vdc. They then steadily go on leaking at that level. With plate volts on them they perform in a similar way, leaving up to 10vdc on the grids, disabling the amp and often wrecking preamp valves I think. So I replace them on sight now. By the way they usually show something like the correct value on my cheapo capacitance meter, which is actually pretty accurate.
Sometimes I wonder whether, since they all seem to act the same, they were somehow meant to behave in that way. Other days, being insecure, I wonder if it's me & my test methods. What I'd expect to see, and do see in other brands even at that age (eg Sangamo), is a quick charge period well under a second, then a drop to zero or near zero volts.
Anyone got any knowledge or experience of these things? They do seem, unless I'm getting this very wrong, to be every bit as crappy as the little black cylindrical Hunts caps in old AC30s and other Brit amps that I mentioned in another post, which generally have become really quite good conductors over the years (or maybe they always were). I guess it might help to have a list of 'shoot on sight' old caps etc. Maybe brands that are usually good too, eg the justly famed mustard caps in old Marshalls, always fine ime.
I have recently taken on some restoration jobs on imported USA Ami jukebox amps, valve amps around 40-50 years old. They tend to use a brand of poly (I guess) coupling cap called 'Tiny Chief'. Red cylinders over 1" long (ie not very Tiny) cased in some kind of plastic, cast rather than dipped, with nice clear yellow printing. Values in the usual range .001uf to .1uF. Initially I test them by putting 75vdc from my power supply on one end, and seeing how much dc gets through to put dc voltage on the other end relative to the supply's negative side. These Tiny Chiefs all act the same - they show almost the full voltage at first, then as they charge, taking about 30 seconds to a minute, the voltage very slowly drops to something in the range 5-8vdc. They then steadily go on leaking at that level. With plate volts on them they perform in a similar way, leaving up to 10vdc on the grids, disabling the amp and often wrecking preamp valves I think. So I replace them on sight now. By the way they usually show something like the correct value on my cheapo capacitance meter, which is actually pretty accurate.
Sometimes I wonder whether, since they all seem to act the same, they were somehow meant to behave in that way. Other days, being insecure, I wonder if it's me & my test methods. What I'd expect to see, and do see in other brands even at that age (eg Sangamo), is a quick charge period well under a second, then a drop to zero or near zero volts.
Anyone got any knowledge or experience of these things? They do seem, unless I'm getting this very wrong, to be every bit as crappy as the little black cylindrical Hunts caps in old AC30s and other Brit amps that I mentioned in another post, which generally have become really quite good conductors over the years (or maybe they always were). I guess it might help to have a list of 'shoot on sight' old caps etc. Maybe brands that are usually good too, eg the justly famed mustard caps in old Marshalls, always fine ime.
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