![]() |
eBay Store Feedback and Some Observations
Affinity For Artifacts sells Taiwanese MPT film and electrolytic capacitors in just about all popular ratings and voltages. The brand is Supertech and it looks like the seller purchased a huge bulk order in 2022 and even had some custom value caps made. I think the seller focuses on vintage guitar amplifier restoration needs but there is plenty of available stock for tube radio and TV resto needs. The prices for these caps are very low...$12 USD for 25 yellow cased MPT capacitors at 630V and $20 USD for all values of 450V/105 degree C rated electrolytic caps.
Additionally, they have large stocks of NOS Sprague, Elmenco, Cornell Dublier, film and can electrolytic capacitors, in fact, they have some remarkable and rare NOS and used items of all kinds...potentiometers, resistors, switches, lights etc. Just realized this sounds like an advertisement which it is not. I'm just wondering if anyone has used their products and I'm particularly interested in opinions on the Supertech brand. I don't know if QC in Taiwan is any better than products from China when it comes to electronic part quality. My experience with Taiwan products is limited to woodworking equipment and the quality has been up and down. I will say they produce less junk than their Chinese competitors. Thanks everyone. Happy New Year!!! |
I've been getting most of my plastic film caps from them the past few years. No problems with those MPT caps. Excellent prices and fast shipping.
I've purchased a few of their electrolytics but have not used many. I feel more comfortable sticking with name brand caps for electrolytics. |
I can say that my last order from JustRadios.com had a sticker on the mailing label that stated "country of origin: Taiwan" which, I agree, is better than China. Heck, Admiral, RCA, Philco, Zenith, etc., were building TV sets there before I was born!
|
I beleive ETR is the manufacture behind these and they now sell to about everyone. I bought these at Antique Electronics way back in the late 80's early 90's. I suspect they also manufacture the CD and Illinois capacitor brands. Also the same caps Just Radios sells, and I see Digikey is even stocking some, although they are not giving them away. http://www.etr.com.tw/eng/dc_use_fil...itors/dc01.htm
|
I have had no problems with any of his parts even use his 1200volt yellow caps
|
Wow...JustRadios has those 6000V long white axial caps. Haven't seen them anywhere for a while. Is ETR a trusted manufacturer Kevin?
|
Quote:
|
That's 2000 hours at 105C and full voltage. Standard lifespan for generic caps.
Cap life is an exponential function of temp. It will last much, much longer than that at room temp. Just Radios has had the 6,000 volt axial caps for years and the main source for them since Allied dried up. |
Quote:
|
Probably means they will no long ready factory specs if left sitting unused for 1000+ hours. Apply some voltage to reform and they'll get back up to spec quickly.
|
Quote:
|
I ordered some of the Supertech electrolytic caps from Affinity for Artifacts just to check out quality. The seller on eBay stated that in 2022, he put in a bulk order in various values and various form factors. The shrink wrap over the caps he recieved was identical looking to the Supertech caps described on their website.
I peeled off the shrink wrap label and found this: https://imagizer.imageshack.com/v2/1...921/a8P3AX.jpg Not sure what to think about this. As commented, many here don't trust any product that's not from the major manufacturers of electrolytic capacitors. These look like Supertech but obviously are not. The eBay seller is the same seller of the MPT yellow caps that some on this forum are utilizing in their projects. Two different products...same seller. Does anyone have feedback on this other than the risk of getting counterfeit products when you don't buy reputable brands? I know the risks, but I'm confused and do not think the seller would sell both reputable and disreputable products coming from the same source or maybe it was him who got scammed in his bulk order. I don't know. |
^ you don't have this issue from mouser or digikey. They may not have the yellow film caps, but those yellow caps are objectively worse parts for anything but restuffing, and most of us don't restuff most of the time.
I mostly use the red ceramic Panasonic film caps in my repairs and only use the yellows for restuffs. The yellow caps can be instantly destroyed by accidently touching the body with a soldering iron. You don't get the with the Panasonics. The leads of the Panasonic caps may not be quite as long, but 1/10 caps I instal having some 18ga bare solid core copper inline western union spliced on and tinned so they can reach the terminals in the chassis isn't the end of the world....Heck, the yellow caps sometimes need an extension splice to match original routing too! The 630V Panasonic films tend to be too tall for easy restuffing, but the 1.6kV parts tend to be short and skinny enough to be condusive to restuffs and last time I ordered caps, for most capacitances, the 1.6kV were cheaper than 630V. |
Mouser and DigiKey I believe sell only Illinois Capacitor caps in the yellow axial format and don’t carry no name film caps as far as what I’ve seen. IC film caps are about the finest in the axial configuration sold. Does anyone recognize the logo on the mystery electrolytic above?
|
Unfortunately you cant place much merit in only the heat shrink labels, because the Asian OEM will spit out any label the purchaser desires. Nichicon and Panasonic were manufactured in Japan, but I would not be surpirsed to find they're also outsourcing to Taiwan and China
|
Mouse and DigiKey sell axial film caps from other makers including Vishay/Roederstein
https://www.mouser.com/c/passive-com...0VDC&instock=y |
Quote:
|
Cost a bit more, but many of them are polypropylene which is generally superior to polyester. Not that it matters in most of what we do. Either is much better than paper.
|
Yeah...just bought 5 of the 0.047 and 5 0.022 and it cost $30 with shipping
|
The MKT series are metalized polyester film according to the data sheet. Is there something on Mouser that shows the country of origin when you're on a specific item? Tariff is based on country, but I don't see it listed.
|
Quote:
|
Yes but I didn't want to buy that many. Penny wise and pound foolish. So, I guess the consensus is the Supertech electrolytic caps are Chinese repackaged fakes? I want to contact the seller and ask what is going on but I'd like some opinions on the capacitor with the "u" printed on it. I looked at hundreds of Google images of Asian manufactured E-caps and didn't find anything that looked like it.
|
There's no way to know who made them, or to what specification. They could have been made for someone that bailed before payment, so the manufacture ran them back through the shrink wrap machine for the next order in line.
|
I contacted him and apparently he has an ongoing relationship with Supertech and their sales representative and wants to get to the bottom of it. Got immediately back to me. I will post when I hear anything.
|
Unfortunately most of these catchy names are nothing more than marketing. I'm surprised no one has requested Super Flux on their shrink wrapper.
|
I did a google image search and got a couple hits with the same logo. Unfortunately I'm not much good at translating anything but English. :D After looking at the Supertech website I'm inclined to think they don't really manufacture any of the caps they're marketing.
https://www.ho-hua.com.tw/h/ProductD...oductId=372614 |
Thanks for this! When I went down that rabbit hole I found some company registration sites that characterized ST as a business with 10-15 employees. Not Nichicon for sure. I did peel a 10uf cap I got from them and it was not rebranded…just the aluminum can under the wrap but a second 33uf cap was the same rebranded cap as the first.
|
Hi all,
If you really want good caps, they are really made in Germany, you can buy them from a guy I know by person, a serious person. https://www.die-wuestens.de/eindex.htm Problem could be the shipping price (since Corona) and and the new taxes since D.T.:thumbsdn: But feel free to ask! Regards, TV-collector:stupid: |
Quote:
|
Quote:
Thank you very much. I will theck it out. |
Amplified Parts in Tempe, AZ among others here in the US carry the F&T electrolytics, though they tend to be specialized towards vintage tube guitar amplifiers.
https://www.amplifiedparts.com/produ...ters=2341a2370 |
I guess I'll add to the pile of options for film capacitors by bringing up the ones made in Italy by ICEL S.r.l. (https://www.icel.it/polypropylene-film-capacitors.html). Their PWS series are large yellow axial snubber-grade polypropylene film capacitors, constructed with metal foil electrodes at each end and a metallized-film "series connection" in between as described in the data sheet (so there's apparently truly no "outside foil" end with these). As of when I purchased some back in 2024, the prices were comparable to equivalent modern CDE "orange drops" made in China. Their physical sizes aren't far off from the old wax paper capacitors. They seem like a good option to me for those preferring a bit more authenticity to original capacitors in terms of physical size and appearance as well as not being made in China.
I've also been buying and using their PHC series metallized-film capacitors with 1.0–2.2 µF values to recap antique telephones with excessively leaky original capacitors; in this case it's not about matching the appearance of the original metal-encased ones (which I leave installed but taken out of circuit) but I'm pleased with their quality and they work just fine. Nichicon is their distributor to the North American market, so they are categorized under "Nichicon" as manufacturer on DigiKey and Mouser; unfortunately neither source stocks them exhaustively so one may have to buy from both to get all the values one needs. Taiwanese-made products are fine with me as well in preference to Chinese-made, so I'm pleased to find out the generic small film caps I've seen in bandersen's photos/videos and that Just Radios sells are apparently made in Taiwan. |
The eBay seller has unfortunately ghosted me which is disturbing given the reliance some reputable restorers have on their MPT axial caps. He has not responded to several inquiries regarding the Supertech electrolytic capacitors after assuring me he would get to the bottom of it.
|
Quote:
|
| All times are GMT -5. The time now is 03:48 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2026, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
©Copyright 2012 VideoKarma.org, All rights reserved.