Internet has become a huge place and this has impact when you seek for information’s too.
By percentage you will fall first over outdated ones or over information which an individual will exaggerate regarding steps to be taken for getting some results in your application.
That is a bit of information with allot of ketchup sauce.
In my case I am restoring my old but expensive pair of speakers and crossovers network are now easy to be tested with my LCR at hand.
I am writing those lines almost shocked by the results after restoring my first of the four capacitors which show signs of changing capacity to a higher number.
For example one 3.3uF was measuring as 4.7uF, after feeding it with 30V AC for 2-3 minutes it capacity restored to 3.9uF which is better but not good enough.
My last crazy thought which paid out was to combine two external DC power supply so to get 80V DC and feed with that the capacitor.
Their named specifications’ are 100V DC / 35V AC and so if those capacitors are healthy they should withstand that voltage and keep going with out problems.
By feeding my capacitor an 3.3uF (4.7uf) with 80V it did start to require an amount of 200mA which it started falling but very slowly, the capacitor become hot as 50 Celsius in just a minute and then by starting to recover it temperature started falling to room temperature.
By monitoring the DC current from the starting point it dropped too as low as 140uA but it needed to be connected at those high volts for 30 minutes.
After seeing that DC current were stabilised at that low value, I removed the capacitor from my test bed and after a good discharge I measured it again with the LCR and now it is measuring
3.218 uF ( 1 KHz) as it should or close to it true specifications.
Before I start screaming Eureka !! Now I am using the same method to an 8.3uF capacitor which has the same symptoms’ by measuring 10.2uF.
Currently the capacitor is connected to DC for 10 minutes and it temperature has fallen to 27.5 which is the room temperature, therefore the recovering signs are visible.
To be continued…