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A Simple Way to Test Capacitors.

I wish I had a dollar for every time I have heard or read "I tested the capacitors and they
all test good but it still doesn't work." The person doing the speaking or writing had used a modern
capacitor tester which only puts about 3 volts across the capacitor. That may be fine for caps used in
transistor circuits but not for those used in tube circuits. The voltages in tube circuits can be as high
as 600 volts and rarely are less than 100 volts. To perform a valid test you must place a significant
voltage across the cap. After giving some preliminary information a method will be provided for
making valid tests on capacitors.
Types of Capacitors.
There are two basic kinds of capacitors, electrolytic and nonelectrolytic. Electrolytic
capacitors are used in the power supplies of vacuum tube and transistor equipment. The testing
method described here does not lend itself well to testing electrolytic caps.
The nonelectrolytic caps are exactly what this test is perfect for. The caps are subdivided
into ceramic, paper, mica, and plastic. The plastic kind are further subdivided into various names of
the plastic and all of them seem to begin with "polly". I'm not going to bore you by laboring
through each of the various pollies. The next time you order capacitors from a catalog or online you
will make their acquaintance.
Common Capacitor Troubles.
The most frequent failure mode of nonelectrolytic capacitors is to become leaky. They
behave as if a large value resistor, 100 k ohms or higher, has been connected in parallel with the
cap. As these types of caps are most frequently used to block DC from getting to a particular part of
the circuit when they become leaky they no longer perform that function.
For example in a standard circuit arrangement a cap is used to couple signal from the
plate of a tube to the grid of the next tube. The DC which is also present at the plate of a tube is
most definitely not wanted at the grid of the next. A leaky cap can send some of the DC to the grid
causing lots of trouble.
A leaky cap can manifest itself in several ways. If the grid belongs to an output tube the
plate may glow red. The leaky capacitor places some positive DC on the grid which may partly or
wholly cancel the negative bias. This causes the tube to draw too much current and the plate has to
dissipate more power than it is rated for. To get rid of the extra power it rises to a higher
temperature and gets hot enough to glow red. This is never a normal condition. If the coupling cap
is between low level stages, further back in the amplifier, the resistance in the plate circuit will keep
the tube from dissipating enough power to glow red but the sound will be badly distorted. You can
often verify this using a voltmeter to measure grid voltages. Tubes that use cathode bias should have
zero volts on the grid. Tubes which use fixed bias should have the negative voltage on the grids and
in the case of a push pull output both tubes should have the same grid voltage.
There aren't many places where even a small amount of leakage can be tolerated but
there are a few. Often a capacitor is connected from some part of the circuit to ground. These are
usually called "bypass" capacitors. That's not a special kind of cap, just the way it is being used in
the circuit. If the resistance associated with the cap is not too large it can work for many years with
a small leakage current. If it is a screen bypass cap it may lower the screen grid voltage and lower
the gain of the amplifier stage. A leaky cap in the AGC circuit of a receiver may or may not have a
significant effect on its operation.

Making the Test.

This is not an in circuit test. You must at the very least disconnect one end of the cap. If
you are using a DMM or VTVM and you leave one end of the cap connected to the circuit it is
possible that some interference can be picked up and throw the readings off. Here is the test circuit.
The power supply should provide a fairly stable DC output. The meter should be set to
measure DC voltage.
Power supply voltage.
The power supply doesn't have to be adjustable but things may be easier if it is. It needs
to be matched to the capacitors to be tested. If you have a 600 volt power supply, you can only test
600 volt, and higher, capacitors. If you have a 400 volt supply, you can test 400 volt, and higher,
caps. If you have a 200 volt ... I think you get the idea. Most coupling and bypass caps are 400 or
600 volts so in the example below a 400 volt power supply will be used.
Type and Range Setting of the Meter.
If you use a 20,000 ohms per volt VOM set to the 500 volt range its input resistance is
10 meg ohms. That's the input resistance of most DMMs and VTVMs. Before you use a particular
instrument be sure you know what it is. If you have a DMM or VTVM that has a 100 or 1000 meg
ohm input resistance you can connect a 10 meg ohm resistor in parallel with it. If you have a 1000
ohms per volt VOM you can't use it, it's not sensitive enough.
Match the range setting to the power supply. I use an adjustable power supply set to 400
volts and a VOM set to the 500 volt range. Remember that the resistance of a VOM changes
depending on the setting of the range switch. If you are using a 200 volt or 600 volt power supply
set the range of your meter accordingly. The meter should always be set to a range higher than the
voltage of the power supply. That way even if the capacitor is a dead short you won't do any
damage to your meter.
Making the Test.
In the following it is assumed that the power supply comes on instantly when the switch
is thrown. If it does not because of the warm up delay of a rectifier tube you need to connect a
switch in series with the capacitor so you can apply the voltage suddenly.
Connect up the circuit and set the meter to the proper range as explained above. If the
meter is a DMM or VTVM turn it on and let it warm up. Then turn on the power supply. The meter
will show a high voltage for a short time but the reading will decay to zero vary quickly.
The time back to zero is about 8 time constants. One time constant in seconds is equal to
R in ohms times C in farads. If you are using a meter with 10 meg ohms input resistance and testing
a .1 microfarad cap the time constant is 1 second. If the capacitor is good the meter should indicate
zero after 8 seconds.
If the cap is totally shorted the meter will read the output voltage of the power supply
and stay there. A more likely outcome is for the cap to be leaky. In that case the meter will kick high
and fall back but not all the way to zero. Using a 10 meg ohm meter the leakage current in
microamps is given by I = V / 10. A cap with a leakage current of only 1 microamp will throw the
bias off by .5 volts if the grid resistor is 500 k ohms.
Switching the meter to a lower range should be done with caution. If you should forget
to change it back you could burn out your meter.
If the meter fails to kick high it means one of two things. Either the capacitor is open or
the capacitance is too small to produce a noticeable kick. A .01 microfarad cap is about the smallest
that will give the kick. Of course this depends on the response speed of the meter movement. You
might be able to go as low as .0025 microfarads if you have a small and fast meter.
NOS and NIB.
These are terms you often run into on eBay or online antique electronics dealers. NOS
stands for New Old Stock and NIB stands for New In Box. They mean essentially the same thing.
The product May be 50 years old but has never been taken out of the box or has never been used in
any way. Electrolytic capacitors that are NOS or NIB have special problems and may be revived as
explained in the article Restoring Dead Capacitors. Nonelectrolytics may be as good as the day they
rolled off the production line or the may not. This test is absolutely recommended for such caps.
A Stand Alone Cap Tester.
If you like to build things you may want to make a dedicated capacitor tester rather than
kluge it together each time you test a cap. If so, here is a circuit.

The transformer should be a 280 VCT (140-0-140) at as low a current rating as you can
find. Unless you plan to let it serve double duty as a project power supply. When used to test
capacitors the current drawn from the transformer secondary is miniscule. The meter needs to be a
50 microamp full scale movement. If it has a 0 to 50 microamp scale that's fine because the current
is what you really want to know. If it has a different scale you can replace it using the techniques
described in the Filter Choke Analyzer article. Do not omit the 150 k ohm 2 watt resistor. This is to
discharge the filter capacitor after the power switch is turned off. The nature of this tester requires
that the voltage start from zero each time. The 150 k ohm resistor discharges the filter capacitor.
This article illustrates that you can do a lot without sophisticated equipment

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