Anyone ever restuffed bumble bee caps?

Guest
I was watching some youtube videos for restuffing electrolytics and wax
paper caps. I see no reason to do the wax paper ones, but I may try a
electrolytic can some day. But nowhere did they show anyone restuffing
the bumble bees. I dont plan to do it, but I'd like to see if its
possible. Those were some of the most colorful caps ever made, and those
would be the ones I'd want to preserve, if I had a lot of time to waste.
 
On Tuesday, 11 December 2018 07:08:26 UTC, tub...@myshop.com wrote:

I was watching some youtube videos for restuffing electrolytics and wax
paper caps. I see no reason to do the wax paper ones, but I may try a
electrolytic can some day. But nowhere did they show anyone restuffing
the bumble bees. I dont plan to do it, but I'd like to see if its
possible. Those were some of the most colorful caps ever made, and those
would be the ones I'd want to preserve, if I had a lot of time to waste.

Sounds difficult. Repainting some old round plastic film caps might be easier, perhaps adding putty to get the right shape/size.


NT
 
On Tuesday, December 11, 2018 at 2:08:26 AM UTC-5, tub...@myshop.com wrote:
I was watching some youtube videos for restuffing electrolytics and wax
paper caps. I see no reason to do the wax paper ones, but I may try a
electrolytic can some day. But nowhere did they show anyone restuffing
the bumble bees. I dont plan to do it, but I'd like to see if its
possible. Those were some of the most colorful caps ever made, and those
would be the ones I'd want to preserve, if I had a lot of time to waste.

I will usually restuff a can electro just to keep things tidy, but I never understood the need to restuff leaded caps. I restored an Fender amp for a guy who wanted the wax caps restuffed, and he paid for the time. So..

I've never restuffed a Bumblebee, but maybe locking it down and boring with a small lathe will give adequate room without destroying the case. Capping it with black epoxy and shaping with a Dremel may give the look you want.

What ever floats your boat.
 
On Tue, 11 Dec 2018 04:44:18 -0800 (PST), John-Del <ohger1s@gmail.com>
wrote:

On Tuesday, December 11, 2018 at 2:08:26 AM UTC-5, tub...@myshop.com wrote:
I was watching some youtube videos for restuffing electrolytics and wax
paper caps. I see no reason to do the wax paper ones, but I may try a
electrolytic can some day. But nowhere did they show anyone restuffing
the bumble bees. I dont plan to do it, but I'd like to see if its
possible. Those were some of the most colorful caps ever made, and those
would be the ones I'd want to preserve, if I had a lot of time to waste.


I will usually restuff a can electro just to keep things tidy, but I never understood
the need to restuff leaded caps. I restored an Fender amp for a guy who
wanted the wax caps restuffed, and he paid for the time. So..
I've never restuffed a Bumblebee, but maybe locking it down and boring with a small
lathe will give adequate room without destroying the case. Capping it
with black epoxy and shaping with a Dremel may give the look you want.
What ever floats your boat.

A yt video shows the easy way to restuff wax-paper types. He heats them
with a heat gun and pulls out the guts. Real easy.....
But the epoxy coated ones seem a lot more difficult.

Id like to design a tool to easily open the crimped over bottom edge on
alum can caps.
 

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