I've got a 1958 Hammond B-3 preamp on the bench at the moment, and it has some coupling capacitors in the .033uf to .33uf range that are sealed in large, hard brown plastic tubes. According to the EIA codes, they were made for Hammond by the John E. Fast Company in 1956.
Just out of curiosity, does anyone know what sort of dielectric these might be? I've heard various speculations over the years. I do know that '56 is too early for Mylar/polyester film. Paper is certainly likely, but there are claims that they were polystyrene (which was around at the time). The packages are very large considering the stated values, and Hammond was known for spending a bit extra on parts where they wanted reliability.
In any case, a rough in-circuit measurement with my ESR meter shows that they're spot-on what you'd expect the meter to show for the nominal values, and they don't leak.
By the time my 1959 C-3 rolled out, these capacitor types had been replaced by Z5U ceramics.
Just out of curiosity, does anyone know what sort of dielectric these might be? I've heard various speculations over the years. I do know that '56 is too early for Mylar/polyester film. Paper is certainly likely, but there are claims that they were polystyrene (which was around at the time). The packages are very large considering the stated values, and Hammond was known for spending a bit extra on parts where they wanted reliability.
In any case, a rough in-circuit measurement with my ESR meter shows that they're spot-on what you'd expect the meter to show for the nominal values, and they don't leak.
By the time my 1959 C-3 rolled out, these capacitor types had been replaced by Z5U ceramics.
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