Old capacitor markings
Old capacitor markings
- CapacitorFrage (24 KB)
- CapacitorPlates (22 KB)
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cm was used until the 40ies of the last century
1cm = 0,0885pF*4π ≈ 1,1pF
You can read more about it here and in this thread, unfortunately in German.
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Capacitance unit
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Scratching my head...
...this is the first time I have ever heard of a variable capacitor used as a volume control! The colored dots, if they are a value marking, suggest a value of 250 000 cm (?--also, the first time I ever heard of cm as a unit of capacitance!...), but, at 275 000pF (275nF), this seems very large for a variable capacitor, even one of that physical size...so, perhaps the yellow dot was not a multiplier?...in which case you're looking at 254 cm (approx 280pF). (red=2, green=5, yellow=4 or 104)
...just educated guessing on my part...I am just an ignorant American, after all ;>)...
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Vintage Volume Control
A similar method was the control with a variable inductive coupling or a shunt potentiometre in parallel to the antenna coil, Figures 168 and 169.
[Günther, H.; Richter, H.: "Schule des Funktechnikers", Vol 1, Frankh, Stuttgart, 1939]
From the schematics can be seen that the value of the variable antenna capacitor is approximately 200 pF and so of a value comparative to the capacity of the antenna itself. The 3 coloured dots on the condensor in the photo in post 1 obviously are no coding of the capacitance value.
Best regards DR
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