Evening Steve,

On the subject of Power supply caps, I recommend some type of resistance rather than say a direct short from an old tool to drain the cap unless you plan on replacing the cap. Using the direct short method can damage either the Caps plates, the di-electric, or both.

Yes, I agree. Later I learned better. Not to mention safety and damage to my screwdrivers.

These were coupling capacitors, also had a special output transformer to connect to the capacitors. I could arrange them any way I wanted, series, parallel, and even series parallel. I had a complete cabinet full of capacitors.

To make things worse, I had several frequency bands  to work with.

Ideally, the center frequencies were about equal, and the extreme outside
frequencies should be about equal and slightly lower than the center bands.
You can picture the graph, I feel sure.

Often easy, but sometimes near impossible.

Many things effected this, large motors, total inductive loads, and power transformers.

In some cases, I could pass the signal thru the power transformers, and to other transformers, then to the secondary of them. Most were 480/ 3phase.
I did not always know the high voltage supplying them.

Yes, as I say,  "Tons of Fun" for some and punishment for others.

Wayne

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