Leakage test below, done
Parts list says that cap is rated at 500 Volts.
In circuit it's not seeing anywhere close to that it looks like, but I wanted to test it as close as to its rated voltage anyway.
Highest voltage rail available is +350V so used that. As I am typing this I am now realizing I could have used that +350V rail in conjunction with the -150V reference rail to get precisely the 500V I needed, bummer, how stupid I am !
Anyway, I think 350V is good enough to draw conclusions here.
So here is how it went :
At power up, voltagE/current was rising, steadily/linearly. After a few seconds, 30 or whatever, it settled at 230Volts, hence 23uA.
It stayed there for 2 minutes then started rising again, very slowly. It got to 260/270Volts.
Then5 minutes later it started climbing again, very slowly. Took the picture below at 304 Votls, but I am checking it right now as I am typing this, and it's already up to 315 Volts now !
No doubt it will reach the full 350V eventually,given enough time...
So that's about 30uA leakage then, eh ?
How good or bad is it ? Have no idea. Do'nt know what is normal / acceptable for cpas in general, never mind for each type of caps, never mind for vintage ones.
However the simple fact that it keeps rising all the time, does not seem right to me. Regardless of what the normal leakage for this type cap is, I would expect it to settle after a few second, not keep rising over the course of an hour...
Also, in the RC network, the 'R' is several Mega-ohms( fixed 2M resistor in series with 5M pot), so 30uA leakage does translate to quite a bit of voltage...
EDIT : just re-did the test, this time under 500V using the -150V rail instead of chassis ground.... Result : immediately upon turning on the power, it jumps to 400Volts. 2 minutes later still at 400V.
So looks like it leaks 40uA then. Oh no wait, it's rising again, now at 420 Volts !!
My first leakage test on vintage caps, cooooool
It's so easy, no need for fancy expensive bulky vintage tester, just use the instrument itself as a power source, test leads and a DMM / voltmeter, and you're in business !!!