I just finished recapping a Leslie 122 amp, and, sometimes out of curiosity, I test the capacitors I remove in the process. This amp was built in 1972 with Sprague 160P capacitors, the ones that I think are known as Black Beauties, and I read online that these were made with a hybrid paper/mylar dielectric known as "Difilm."
Though they weren't leaking--yet--they were 20-30% over nominal value and had dissipation factor readings about eight times that of known-good mylar or paper capacitors. In contrast, some 1968 CDE "greenies" I removed from another recent rebuild tested like new.
That leaves me wondering--what was the reason for developing hybrid paper/mylar capacitor dielectrics in the first place?
Though they weren't leaking--yet--they were 20-30% over nominal value and had dissipation factor readings about eight times that of known-good mylar or paper capacitors. In contrast, some 1968 CDE "greenies" I removed from another recent rebuild tested like new.
That leaves me wondering--what was the reason for developing hybrid paper/mylar capacitor dielectrics in the first place?
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