1958-62 Telecaster REPRO Capacitors Set ZNW1P1 & ZYW1S5Helps
captures the sound of the Late 50's early 60's Telecaster!
Hand
Made by Luxe Radio & Musical Instruments Co. in the USA!
This
auction is for a pair of Paper in Oil REPRO Cornell-Dubilier
.05ufd/150vdc (ZYW1S5 Tubular) and .1ufd/150vdc (ZNW1P1 Chiclet)
caps as used in the Telecaster from 1958 to 1962. These caps
were factory installed in all Telecasters made between 1958
and 1961 ('62 is cheatin' but these are much cooler than the
ceramics). This wiring scheme is often referred to as the
Dark Circuit. All the great old Tele’s, including those from
the golden year of 1953, were wired this way. The 3 positions:
neck pickup alone with bass sound with no tone control, neck
pickup alone with tone control and bridge pickup alone with
tone control. To combine pickups, you have to park the switch
between settings, just like Roy and Keef.
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Construction:
The capacitor is hand-made using NOS Paper-in-Oil Vitamin
Q type .047uF/100v capacitors as the core.
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Wax
Capacitor Replicating: Luxe reproduction wax capacitors
are made with the same materials and methods as the original.
The only difference is that instead of a foil and paper
“slug” at the core, they use a NOS Vitamin Q type paper
and oil capacitor. These were manufactured from the 1950s
through the 1980s by various companies, like Sprague,
for military and aerospace use. Unlike other types of
capacitors, the dielectric and foil in these are sealed
in a metal and glass tube, making them impervious to heat
and moisture. They do not degrade with time and they do
not drift in value. They have the added bonus of having
an oil-soaked paper as the dielectric, which arguably
has a more “musical” quality than any other dielectric.
Luxe ensures that every cap made uses some raw materials
from the appropriate era. Their recipes follow the same
ones used by the original manufacturers, with a few changes.
For example: Dykanol is not used in their capacitors.
Most capacitors made before 1956 were coated with a blend
of pitch and petroleum jelly, this is the nasty sticky
stuff that radio guys hate, Luxe uses pitch and beeswax.
It looks the same, but it doesn’t get all over the place.
Why
should you use these caps? Most will agree that a vintage
paper in oil cap has the best sound for a vintage instrument.
But the problem with many old caps (film and wax-paper)
is that they dry out and begin to leak. Vintage Vitamin
Q type caps, on the other hand, are sealed in glass and
encased in metal, so they can handle flying through space
and guiding missiles. They don't leak unless you smash them
with a hammer. When you install a 50-year-old Vitamin Q
cap in your guitar, you get the exact sound that your guitar
was meant to have. When you install a Luxe cap in your guitar,
you get a 30 to 50 year old, unused, Paper in Oil cap that
looks exactly like the cap that should be there, and will
last forever.
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