Hello there,
So I have this vintage Canadian amp here, no schematic, and I'm replacing a number of caps that have drifted way high in terms of capacitance measurement. Photos below. I'm not sure what to replace these with. For starters, both the red ones and the gray ones have power ratings of 600 WV. I assume WV means "watt-volt". For my purposes can I just read that as 600 V?
The gray ones appear to be electrolytic but have a relatively low capacitance (.05uF) and no clear indication of polarity, unless the silver on one end indicates negative and the black on the other end indicates positive. I usually order caps from Digikey and the lowest value electrolytic I can even search for is 0.1uF. They are between mains power (on/off switch, fuse) and chassis ground.
The red ones have even lower values (.005uF to .25uF) and have a black stripe on one end to indicate polarity. But does that mean they are necessarily electrolytic? Here I run into the same problem of being unsure whether it's even possible to source electrolytic caps with such low values.
Can anyone advise on suitable replacements?
So I have this vintage Canadian amp here, no schematic, and I'm replacing a number of caps that have drifted way high in terms of capacitance measurement. Photos below. I'm not sure what to replace these with. For starters, both the red ones and the gray ones have power ratings of 600 WV. I assume WV means "watt-volt". For my purposes can I just read that as 600 V?
The gray ones appear to be electrolytic but have a relatively low capacitance (.05uF) and no clear indication of polarity, unless the silver on one end indicates negative and the black on the other end indicates positive. I usually order caps from Digikey and the lowest value electrolytic I can even search for is 0.1uF. They are between mains power (on/off switch, fuse) and chassis ground.
The red ones have even lower values (.005uF to .25uF) and have a black stripe on one end to indicate polarity. But does that mean they are necessarily electrolytic? Here I run into the same problem of being unsure whether it's even possible to source electrolytic caps with such low values.
Can anyone advise on suitable replacements?
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