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Old December 4th 03, 05:46 PM
Frank Dresser
 
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"Michael A. Terrell" wrote in message
...

I am restoring a TS-382 Audio signal generator that is built with

all
bathtub cabs, and every one of them is bad. They were made with the

same
high acid paper that wax and molded capacitors were made with, they

are
just sealed in transformer oil. I am in the process of unsoldering the
cans and replacing the caps inside with metal film capacitors I have

to
use a torch to heat the case and cover. There is a small vent hole

that
is soldered shut. You have to find it and remove the solder first, or

it
may blow hot solder on you when remove solder melts around the edge of
the cover. Then I use a curved dental pick to lift the cover off while
carefully heating the cover with a torch. I use a small drill press

vice
with smooth jaws to hold the can, and set it on a sheet of steel. (An
old desktop PC case is good, because it has an open airspace under

it.)

Steel bath tub caps have been pretty reliable for me. Certainly more
reliable than paper or electolytic caps. I've got the chassis out of my
S-36, and I'll check those steel caps carefully.


When I started this I dug through my collection of NOS bathtubs,

and
most of them have high leakage as well. I did find one company who
still makes new bathtub, and other oil filled caps, but I couldn't

spend
several hundred dollars for new caps for one project.
--
21 days!


Michael A. Terrell
Central Florida


I only have a few NOS steel caps in my collection. I checked them a
couple of years ago, and they were good.

Anyway, oil filled steel caps were more reliable than paper caps and
electrolytics in the mid 50s and were the usual choice with cost is no
object equipment.

Frank Dresser