Hello again. circa 1966 Farfisa organ amplifier. Power supply caps (and others) leaking and for sure shot. Strangely all the caps are even values I.E. 500 / 50 / 200/ etc. Guess what? MCM and others only list the values I remember (from Heathkit days) like 470 / 47. Do I really have to tack on little baby adder cap's (4.7 / 33) to make up this difference? I am aware of the voltage requirements. I have also check the good ole web on this subject - most sites say do do de-rate values - but come on - 10%????
Electrolytic capacitors have pretty wide tolerance ranges, something like +/-20% are very common. I would not worry about the small difference. Be sure to cover the voltage range needed, and also be sure to check for non-polarized caps also.
10% still leaves the capacitance at a conservative value. The present caps have probably lost most of their capacitance anyway, and any new caps will sound better.
I would suggest +/-20% would be pretty rare, the tolerance is usually MUCH worse than that on electrolytics +100%/-50% isn't uncommon. So it's in no way critical, it's obvious what replaces what:
I would suggest +/-20% would be pretty rare, the tolerance is usually MUCH worse than that on electrolytics +100%/-50% isn't uncommon. So it's in no way critical, it's obvious what replaces what:
True, the +20 & -80 is very common. Depends on what you want to spend, and what the WVDC rating is. Filter caps should always be over spec'd anyways, more is better, you can never get "too smooth" or "too quiet", LOL.
Great advice; thank you! I also noticed another quirk in the project - the old caps had two volt ratings. For example 12/18; 30/45; 50/65; 70/80. These numbers follow the designations VL and VI; VL being the lower number. Your opinion on what would be the correct number to shoot for. All the off-the-shelf cap voltages at MCM supply are 16/25/50/100/250.
Go for the higher voltage, I would also STRONGLY suggest you use 105 degree capacitors, rather than the cheaper 85 degree ones - I only stock 105 degree ones now at work.