On Fri, 17 Jul 2015, Jay Jaeger wrote:
On 7/17/2015 1:33 PM, Rich Alderson wrote:

It is generally a good idea to re-form electrolytic capacitors in power supplies, and to bench check the power supplies (under some kind of load) before actually applying power to the whole unit.

It is always a good idea to replace electrolytic capacitors in power supplies. The rest of the advice is sound.

Replace - no, I don't agree - especially not for those of us who don't
have the kind of budget that your organization has.  In my experience,
for equipment of this quality and vintage, 95% or more of the time an
hour to a few hours of re-forming is all that is necessary - and as Tony
has pointed out, even that is not often really necessary.

Replace - yes, *especially* if you don't have a big budget. Aluminum electrolytic capacitors are CHEAP and easy to obtain. Replacement semiconductors by comparison are expensive and can be quite difficult to find.

While it might be worthwhile reforming a special purpose NOS electrolytic that isn't much older than 15-20 years old, reforming 20-30 year old heavily used (read: past usable service life; evaporation of the electrolyte, corrosion of the foils and especially foil to terminal junctions, etc) is a complete and total waste of time.

Ironically, 20-30 years ago this same mindset used to persist with people who collected vacuum tube (valve) based radios and television, however that attitude no longer seems to be present in those communities today (not worth risking an irreplaceable transformer or inductor over $5.00-$10.00 worth of aluminum electrolytics).

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