has anyone ever experienced a mold or fungus growing on those green polyester capacitors found in many electronics items from the seventies eighties? What is it and why's it there?
I wouldn't be surprised if you're on the right track or even nailed it. Thumbs up on the follow-up/research.im finding this very interesting, and im now wondering why ive never seen this before.
pretty much everything i work on aside from galaxy radios is from that era.
i wonder if living in the desert has any effect on how these caps age.
i did find something that might be a first clue as to what is going on, and that is a possible name for this white powder.
"polytetrafluorethylene (say that three times fast!) - a white powder that can be moulded or extruded. highly resistant to moisture and chemicals, withstands temperatures up to 250*C. low loss, high-frequency application."
i found this in an electrical engineers reference book. not sure if this is the stuff, but maybe a place to start.
i am also finding references to "chlorinated polypropylene" which is a white powder that might be used in making these caps.
i will keep digging.
LC
im finding this very interesting, and im now wondering why ive never seen this before.
pretty much everything i work on aside from galaxy radios is from that era.
i wonder if living in the desert has any effect on how these caps age.
i did find something that might be a first clue as to what is going on, and that is a possible name for this white powder.
"polytetrafluorethylene (say that three times fast!) - a white powder that can be moulded or extruded. highly resistant to moisture and chemicals, withstands temperatures up to 250*C. low loss, high-frequency application."
i found this in an electrical engineers reference book. not sure if this is the stuff, but maybe a place to start.
i am also finding references to "chlorinated polypropylene" which is a white powder that might be used in making these caps.
i will keep digging.
LC
I highly doubt that is what it is. PTFE is commonly known as Teflon and although it may start off as a powder once manufactured into Teflon it does not break back down into a white powder again. I have seen similar "mold" on other components including metal coils cases. I suspected it was from the changes in humidity and dust infiltration. The hard smooth plastic cases of the caps would be quite damp feeling after a large temperature swing from cold to warm.