hi all i found a video that might be useful to our projects, it relates to the polarity of capacitors specifically types that are not normally considered to have a polarity.
normally polystyrene or polypropylene type caps are not considered polarity dependent, even though they are, one lead will connect to the outer end of the material the cap is made from this should go to the ground side of the circuit, this gives maximum shielding to noise and hum.
most every day circuits this will not matter, but amps and receivers and sensors can benefit from checking the caps.
the video explains this concept and even gives a test circuit you can build, though any scope will show the low amplitude side of the cap under test.
i use this approach now and i figured anything that can help reduce noise in our detector circuits must be a plus.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BnR_DLd1PDI
normally polystyrene or polypropylene type caps are not considered polarity dependent, even though they are, one lead will connect to the outer end of the material the cap is made from this should go to the ground side of the circuit, this gives maximum shielding to noise and hum.
most every day circuits this will not matter, but amps and receivers and sensors can benefit from checking the caps.
the video explains this concept and even gives a test circuit you can build, though any scope will show the low amplitude side of the cap under test.
i use this approach now and i figured anything that can help reduce noise in our detector circuits must be a plus.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BnR_DLd1PDI
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