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ehsjr ehsjr is offline
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wrote:
On Mar 13, 7:00 pm, ehsjr wrote:

wrote:

On Mar 12, 5:39 pm, John Fields wrote:


On Wed, 12 Mar 2008 07:43:19 -0700 (PDT),
wrote:


On Mar 11, 3:34 pm, John Fields wrote:


On Mon, 10 Mar 2008 07:57:49 -0700 (PDT),
wrote:


On Mar 10, 10:59 am, John Fields
wrote:


On Sun, 9 Mar 2008 16:57:49 -0700 (PDT), wrote:


Since "restoring voltage handling capability" means thickening up the
oxide layer, it probably will decrease the part's capacitance,
bringing it back towards the as-new value. The tolerance on most
electrolytic capacitors is pretty high, so it might be hard to prove.


---
You certainly don't seem to be thinking straight since, regardless
of the tolerance, measuring the capacitance before, and then after
reforming would certainly indicate if the process had changed the
capacitance.


Sure it would, but how many people have a capacitor handy that needs
reforming?


---
Who cares?


We're talking process, not logistics.


Actually, we are talking about being helpful,


---
No, we're not.


Being helpful doesn't seem to figure in your priorities,


I guess you were sleeping through the hundreds and hundreds,
maybe *thousands* of helpful posts from JF over the years.



Many of them would have been more helpful


By specifying that they could have been _more_ helpful,
you are specifying that they *were* helpful, proving that
your attempted implication that he was not helpful is
bull****. And your attempted denegration of him in the
remainder of your post is just pathetic. The picture
you paint - of yourself - is not pretty.

Ed




if he were a better
electronic engineer.

His intentions might be good, but his repertoire is very restricted,
and he doesn't understand that even good solutions can always be made
better, not that any solution involving a 555 or and LM318 is ever
going to rate as good (except perhaps for dumpster-diving).

--
Bill Sloman, Nijmegen