I did some testing on the Russian SSG capacitors, and also a Genrad 1409-G Standard Mica capacitor. I saw the same capacitor that I am using was available on eBay at $10 for 4 capacitors. The Genrads often sell for over US$100.
My test setup was a ESI 701 Capacitance Measuring System, with a small foam esky to act as my temperature chamber.
I put two 50nF Russian SSG capacitors in parallel is a small shielded box to make a 0.1uF capacitor (it measured 0.10001 uF).
The Genrad was a custom value type 1409-g. This is normally a 2nF +/- 0.1% part, but it was obviously customized by Genrad before sealing to be 1.9865 +/- 0.05%. This is probably important to the following tests. It measured at 1.9875 nF.
Here is the Capacitance variation versus frequency. The Russian capacitors were clearly better then my Genrad.
Now for the capacitance variation versus temperature at 1kHz test frequency.
The Russian capacitor is brilliant, but what is happening to the Genrad? The Genrad is meant to be +25 to +45 ppm/C between 13 and 33 degrees, but instead it is rubbish.
If you look at the dissipation factor, same story. The Russian capacitor dissipation factor was 0.00007 at 12 degrees to 0.00012 at 39 degrees. Again brilliant!
The Genrad is meant to be better then 0.0003. The dissipation factor was 0.0003 at 10 degrees, about 0.006 at 23 degrees and 0.0013 at 33 degrees! Something is very wrong.
What I think has happened is that to get 1.9865 uF, they took an unsealed 2nF from the production line and added a 0.27uF cap in series. The trouble is that the 0.27 uF would not have been mica. It was built about 1959, and they could have even put a paper capacitor in. It would explain the poor curves now. Also, the Genrad capacitors are not hermetically sealed. They put in a packet of Silica Gel and seal it with something like Butyl Rubber (Mastic). After over 50 years, the silica gel may have lost the ability to absorb any more moisture. The Russian capacitor is hermetically sealed.
The new type 1409 caps from IET have a coefficient of +20ppm/C and this Russian cap is about +11ppm/C.
I have only tested one, but I think that the Russian SSG caps are about half the drift and dissipation of the IET Type 1409 Standard Capacitors. The SSG's look very stable on the bridge and I think with a more accurate temperature curve characterization, it would be very easy to work out the capacitance to 10ppm given the temperature.
The other message is: avoid custom value Genrad Standard caps.