.001 ceramic

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Hi.I need a .001 uf CERAMIC capacitor for a train wreck clone. I can buy ONE for .34c but the freight is $15!!! I don't really want to argue the very arguable need for this particular part. Its a Trainwreck clone and for once i want to try it right. Any thoughts on salvaging one or perhaps a good sort would drop one in the mail for karma,or at the least some paypal?
Bit desperate
Mick
 
old TV's, CRT monitors, and PC power supplies are full of old parts. Walk around early in the morning on garbage pickup day.
The ceramic caps are not usually what failed. I cut them up occasionally for resistors capacitors and diodes. The electrolytic caps are trash.
 
You will most always run into the basic shipping charge if you order something from a supplier. One cap or a thousand is still a small package that must be shipped, doesn't cost them less for being almost empty.

How about walking into a local electronic repair shop - televisions, stereos, computers, even appliances, and ask them if they have a part they would sell you. If you walked in here, I;d probably just give you one. My sales tickets cost me 15 cents each. SO rather than use up a ticket, i ive the occasional resistor or cap away for free.
 
Mick,

Farnell now called Element14, R.S. Electronics for mail order within Oz.

Should be a local Altronics distributor nearby which will have them.
Altronics - Your One Stop Audio Visual & Electronics Supplier

I built a trainwreck, disc ceramic is the go for that cap.
If you get desperate PM me and I'll put a couple in the post from Adelaide.

If you are a member you can see my schematics etc. here - the "Junkbox Trainwreck" built from an old Ozzie AWV PA Amplifier.
http://ampgarage.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=17851

Cheers,
Ian
 
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The "Junkbox Trainwreck" I did. For your possible interest.

Note you end up with a spare 1/2 of a 12AX7, I added a "wrinkle" of my own by using a parallel input to take advantage of that spare triode. The 2 triodes at dissimilar operating points for a bit of harmonic emphasis.

Cheers,
Ian
 

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Nigel may well be right.
I copied this schematic before adding my own "wrinkles".
http://www.blueguitar.org/new/schem/trainwreck/wreckxpr.pdf

It says 0.001 Ceramic parallel with 0.001 poly for that coupling cap so thats what I used.
Probably would not be able to tell the difference if you just used a single 0.0022 (2n2) poly cap.
Poly means, polyester, polypropylene, polystyrene etc. all of which may (or may not) sound a little different. I used polypropylene.

Ceramic Caps suffer from dielectric absorbtion, that is they cause distortion of their own so it is not beyond belief that it does affect the sound somewhat. You will (should) never see a ceramic coupling cap in a HiFi Amp.

Cheers,
Ian
 
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Nigel may well be right.
I copied this schematic before adding my own "wrinkles".
http://www.blueguitar.org/new/schem/trainwreck/wreckxpr.pdf

Is the output transformer labelled incorrectly?. 16 ohm in the middle, and 8 ohm at the end?.

It says 0.001 Ceramic parallel with 0.001 poly for that coupling cap so thats what I used.
Probably would not be able to tell the difference if you just used a single 0.0022 (2n2) poly cap.
Poly means, polyester, polypropylene, polystyrene etc. all of which may (or may not) sound a little different. I used polypropylene.

Of course not - it's just a coupling capacitor in a low quality valve amp, neither the type of capacitor or it's value are in any way critical. Personally I probably wouldn't have even considered one that low a value, and probably used 0.01uF throughout.

Ceramic Caps suffer from dielectric absorption, that is they cause distortion of their own so it is not beyond belief that it does affect the sound somewhat. You will (should) never see a ceramic coupling cap in a HiFi Amp.

There's a lot of rubbish written about different types of capacitors causing distortion - but many of the worlds best sounding amplifiers used the supposed 'problem' capacitors and they weren't of any concern.

And it's certainly no concern for a guitar amp :D
 
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