cleaning tuning capacitors
Hi All,
can anyone give me some sensible advice on cleaning up tuning capacitors? Ive one that i have salvaged, ive swept out the vanes with a soft brush, but its still a little dirty, i'd like to clean it up better before reusing it ive seen all sorts of chemical cleaners mentioned on other sites but these all seem to be american Martin |
Re: cleaning tuning capacitors
Bung it in a dishwasher (check the XYL is out first)
Been doing it for years, and results are impressive! Sean |
Re: cleaning tuning capacitors
thats something ive heard, any hints on settings?
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Re: cleaning tuning capacitors
For the standard aluminium tuning gangs, I slosh them around in a bowl of hot water with some ordinary washing powder, rinse and dry thoroughly and re-oil the bearings, they usually come up nicely 8-).
Regards, Mick. |
Re: cleaning tuning capacitors
Normally just use a hot wash, then as soon as the cycle finishes, pull them out, so the heat in them dries them off
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Re: cleaning tuning capacitors
Like Sean, I recommend the dishwasher too. Can I add to his advice that I prefer to use the top (least aggressive) part of the dishwasher, and that works fine. And as Mickjjo points out you MUST remember to lubricate the bearings afterwards.
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Re: cleaning tuning capacitors
If you can dismantle it without unsoldering anything then I would do that. If it is brass then you could polish the vanes after the washing machine. A lollipop stick may fit nicely between them depending on how miniature the thing is. If it is aluminium don`t leave it too long in the washing machine as the detergent may attack the aluminium..
Pat G3IKR |
Re: cleaning tuning capacitors
Interesting Thread.
Washing powder contains caustic soda (sodium hydroxide, NaOH) - albeit in a dilute form. Caustic soda will attack aluminium - I frequently use it (diluted with water) in the kitchen to remove stubborn baked-on grease from aluminium cooking trays that have been used in the oven. Since this chemical is not that difficult to obtain 'over the counter' as 'soda crystals', perhaps a solution of same in a plastic washing-up bowl will do the same thing - without using the washing-machine, etc. A few words of caution: there will be noxious fumes given off, the density dependant on the strength of the solution. Use a face mask to protect your lungs; plastic / rubber gloves to protect your fingers. Having a window open nearby is also a good idea. And don't splash the solution in your eyes! Wear goggles. Al. / Skywave. |
Re: cleaning tuning capacitors
A good few ideas there.
Im not sure i will have to go as strong as Sodium Hydroxide, might look a bit odd to the neighbours if im stood outside in my old S10 respirator swirling radio parts in a bucket 8-o :-D |
Re: cleaning tuning capacitors
I'm with the dishwasher folk!
I dismantle the cap first, though, and remove the steel balls. Advisable to count the threads on the screw so the spacing (and therefore capacitance) are the same, but prepare for realignment afterwards. Use thick (water-pump) grease on the bearings. The advantage of using the dishwasher as opposed to just washing it in a bowl is that the high-pressure spray generated that really does clean everything. |
Re: cleaning tuning capacitors
I'd go for the dishwasher too. But first, put a few pieces of aluminium through (even a small plate wrapped in aluminium cooking foil would do) just to check the detergent doesn't attack aluminium.
As has been said, caustic sode (sodium hydroxide) attacks aluminium fairly quickly. Washing soda (sodium carbonate) will, albeit slowly - and this is a likely ingredient of dishwasher tablets. |
Re: cleaning tuning capacitors
It's important to ensure that any cleaning chemicals are washed off at the end. Dishwashers do a rinse cycle for that.
Any other method should be followed by thorough rinsing e.g. in distilled water. Domestic cleaners are usually alkaline and so the aluminium parts will be slightly etched as a result. They also often contain salt which if not washed off will deal with the steel parts in time. I usually clean variable capacitors using a degreasing gun blowing a solvent like meths or IPA. |
Re: cleaning tuning capacitors
Can I ask a simple question? Why?
The object of the exercise should be that it works properly. Anything else is akin to the people who religiously clean the engine of their car, get the manifolds and rocker chromed and then leave the bonnet open so everyone else can see. If it's dusty then blow and brush. If it's greasy wash it in , say, meths. Certainly relubricate, adjust if necesary and make sure the moving contacts are clean. If it's corroded then the more exotic methods quoted may well be necesary, but I guess at that stage you're in the lap of the Gods anyway. Alan |
Re: cleaning tuning capacitors
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I wouldn't ever touch them if they were working OK, but excessive dirt between the vanes can change the capacitance, or worse! Past experience suggests that attempts to improve them often make them worse so I consider this to be a last ditch. I guess some people also like their sets to look brand new. |
Re: cleaning tuning capacitors
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That would appear to be the 'object of the exercise', although I appreciate that there are degrees of 'restoration & repair' that will vary according to any particular individual's wants, needs and opinions. Al. / Skywave. |
Re: cleaning tuning capacitors
Well, I like the chassis of my radios to be things of beauty, also, and I give my tuning capacitors a good seeing-to. Having said that, although I supported the idea of a dishwasher in my earlier post, I've not actually done this because the dishwasher in my house is me!
The last variable capacitor I cleaned was of Polar manufacture, rivetted and soldered together, and I didn't disturb these. So, I cleaned everything with white spirit and a soft paint brush. I find white spirit in a pump-action spray bottle, ex-bathroom cleaner, is really useful as you can put a bit of force behind the spray. After cleaning and thoroughly drying (2 days), I re-lubricated the bearings using a mixture of motor grease and Moly-slip, thinned down with enough paraffin so that I could squirt it using a hypodermic syringe and flexible tube, putting it exactly where I wanted it, a good blob between each ball. The idea is that the paraffin will inevitable evaporate but the grease will be left behind. There is a wire spring to give good contact with the rotor, and this I left unlubricated (although thinking about it some switch contact grease would not come amiss here). |
Re: cleaning tuning capacitors
Al,
This of course gets back to the 'how much restoration' debate, so we'd better agree to differ before we're chopped off :) Alan |
Re: cleaning tuning capacitors
When a tuning capacitor is really greasy and filthy, I run it through the parts washer for an hour or so (using Swarfega dilute degreaser) followed by a "gentle" blast of compressed air and then a re-lube.
Neil |
Re: cleaning tuning capacitors
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I don't know what chemicals are in that. Frank |
Re: cleaning tuning capacitors
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