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![]() "Mike Knudsen" wrote in message ... This makes very good sense. I suspect that back in the old days, manufacturers would throw in up to 100% extra foil plates area just to make sure they at least met the rated capacitance. So you would get caps well over the ratings. But yes, once they got the process down really tight, why toss in extra material. In fact, shaving it on the low side is just what the front-office bean coutners probably tell them to do nowadays! --Mike K. Oscar loves trash, but hates Spam! Delete him to reply to me. I don't think I've ever seen an electrolytic capacitor read more than 20% high, and even that range is very rare. Even on the few low ESR survivors from the late 40's - early 50's. I'm not using a lab quality bridge, or checking large numbers of electrolytic capacitors, so I can't come to really firm conclusions. But I'm thinking the manufacturing process was reasonably precise by 1950. I don't know if the comparision holds, but carbon composition resistors were getting more precise all through that era, as well. The 5%ers were pretty common around 1970. I have to wonder how much expense was added to the more precise resistors just for keeping extra inventory. There's about twice as many values for 10%ers as 20%ers. Double it again for the 5%ers. Assuming the cap makers could reliably come with 5% electrolytics, would there be any value to stocking 4 times as many values? I can't think of any. They are used almost entirely for power supply filtering, or audio coupling. So maybe they kept the old 20% spec on 5% tolerence caps only to keep inventory simple. Frank Dresser |
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