I find that this kind of topic in the beginner section is not very profitable.
This encourages beginners to develop a real phobia of electrolytic capacitors ....
The attitude towards electrolytic capacitors must be moderate and mitigated.
Systematically replacing ALL electrolytic capacitors is, in many cases, utterly stupid.
We often bring more problems than we solve.
We must remember a few rules:
- Nobody cared about the ESR capacitors before the advent of switching power supplies, then, come to change electrolytic capacitors in a 70s amp on the pretext that the ESR is too high, it's absurd.
- Generally, a too high ESR is manifested in one way or another: ripple too high, oscillations, instabilities, ....
To understand if the ESR has or not an importance in the circuit, imagine the circuit with an additional resistance in series with the capacitor .... the operation of the circuit will be modified or not?
For example, for an inter-stage capacitor of an audio amplifier, the low leakage is more important than the ESR.
In a switched-mode power supply, the ESR can usually be checked in circuit by measuring the ripple and comparing it with the ripple specified by the manufacturer of the device.
It is normally necessary to replace:
- bulged capacitors or with leaking electrolyte
- capacitors placed near a heat source. (power resistors, radiators, ...)
- SMD electrolytics capacitors .... if we find that some are defective, it is better to change them all.
In principle, the capacity, ESR and leakage at rated operating voltage should be checked , not just the ESR.
I repair vintage audio gears, my customers know I refuse to recap their amplifiers and receivers, I only replace what is really faulty.....I have no claim, nor return, all my customers are very satisfied.