I sure wish you had made testing the germanium transistor part of your video. That's what I'm look'n fur. How to test a Delco radio germanium trans. You dig?
@MotorSwapDan
3 жыл бұрын
Thanks for this!!
@leonardpeters3266
3 жыл бұрын
You are welcome. Hope it helps
@janbill79
2 жыл бұрын
what a great job with the 1972 delco or what ever brand. I wanted to buy some off ebay from that era (am radio's) and see if I could fix them, but after seeing 4 caps in 1 can, yikes but thks for the fun video to watch
@lyndasander5972
3 жыл бұрын
I need to replace that same 4 unit cap. in the video you mention the sizes of the other caps on the circuit board that needed replacing but not the ones in the 4 unit (except for the non-polarized). They're labeled on the old cap as 850mfd 16v, 400mfd 16v, and 250mfd 2v. What are the correct replacements?
@leonardpeters3266
3 жыл бұрын
If I remember correctly I used a 1000uf/50V, 470uf/50v and 330uf/10v. As far as the requirements go, anything the same size or bigger will work. I usually try to stay close, but bigger, and use standard sizes. An example would be if there were a 8uf/4v cap I would use a 10uf/10v cap to replace it. In general everyone has an opinion about what is allowable for capacitor replacements. My perspective from experience is, never put in a capacitor with a lower voltage or capacitance rating than the original. Try not to go higher in capacitance then 50% more than the original value. Higher voltage rating is not a problem at all.
Пікірлер: 6