Quote:
Originally Posted by kvflyer
Interesting.
I recently restored (But did not align) my 630TS and found that half of the original electrolytic capacitors tested good (out of circuit) for leakage; the other half were no good. I restuffed the bad ones and reconnected those testing good. I could see that those which tested good were a different manufacturer (or design or whatever, just different). Sure made things easier.
I guess they may be from the same era/manufacturer?
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The capacitors in this 721TS initially looked bad. But the set had been stored away and left dormant for 55 years when I bought it. I slowly reformed the capacitors over the course of four days. The key is to limit the current to just under 10mA and slowly bring up the voltage until it meets or slightly exceeds the maximum rated voltage. I would then let it sit at the maximum voltage for a few hours and notice the current continue to drop until it was no more than 200uA at maximum voltage. All of the capacitors came back that way.
However, I have a Canadian market RCA CTC5 color TV. The set was manufactured in Camden NJ and in Montreal it was modified for 25Hz power. The modification included replacing the power transformer on the main chassis with a 25 Hz filament only transformer and then adding a separate small additional chassis with a massive B supply transformer, an additional filter chole plus two Canadian mad Sprague 80uF 500v electrolytic capacitors. The main chassis had Camden installed Mallory capacitors.
When I restored the set in 2014, the Mallory capacitors reformed dielectrics were very low leakage 100uA or less. The Sprague's were close to 1mA leakage at 500v. I left them in and 8 years later one shorted and destroyed a pair of 5U4 rectifiers. I felt at the time the Sprague's were marginal. But the Malloys remain fine.