Ah - you've caught me. My 40uF MBGO is actually two individual 20uF 160v caps. Compared to the paper and tin foil caps, these are pretty small. I like them because they have a nice mounting tab welded across the bottom. I measured all of my Russian caps for leakage, the MGBO had about 1uA of leakage on my meter. I also charged them up to 150vDC and let them sit for 24 hours. After this time, two of them had only 8% of their initial charge left, one had 26% left, and the best of the lot had 40% of the initial charge after a day. I'll see how they perform in the amp. If they don't work out, the MBGO will get replaced with an ASC 45uF big can cap.
The OKBG are paper and tin foil and performed much better. I could measure no leakage on my meter and these all had about 70% of their initial charge (350vDC) remaining after 24 hours. I figured none of this was very critical as they are all bypassed by resistors that will drain them much faster than their own internal discharge rates will.
The Aiken Amps paper on grounding is an excellent resource. I've read it several times now, making notes along the way, and have a trivia question for the crowd: Is Star grounding or Buss grounding preferred? I'm thinking this design lends itself nicely to using three star grounds, one on each of the main 20uF caps to make increasingly "quieter" ground points.
« Last Edit: August 03, 2019, 04:07:02 AM by EricS »
Eric
Haven't electrocuted myself yet...
There are ALWAYS User Serviceable Parts Inside!