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Re: Choosing the right replacement cap


 

Me, too.? I used to order tons of components for work, and the few times they messed up, they made it right immediately.? Could not ask for better customer service!Jim Ford?Sent from my Verizon, Samsung Galaxy smartphone

-------- Original message --------From: toby@... Date: 11/25/20 8:47 AM (GMT-08:00) To: [email protected] Subject: Re: [TekScopes] Choosing the right replacement cap On 2020-11-25 11:11 a.m., Tom Phillips wrote:> Dave,> > Regarding your question "How are places like Mouser and Digikey with small time onsie-twosie buyers..."> > I have found that they are amazingly cooperative with small orders. I have been refurbishing many of my personal test equipment units each of which need a variety of replacement electrolytic caps. I end up ordering "kits" of parts after spending a significant amount of time using the search engines on the supplier's web site to find high quality replacements of suitable size and value. I choose only "in stock" parts because the stated manufacturers lead time for non stocked parts is just an estimate and usually requires a substantial minimum order quantity. I also want my "kit" to arrive complete so I can get on with the project. During my last order I found that Mouser didn't quite have all the parts I needed but Newark did and the Newark pricing was better. Digikey is a good supplier too. I just haven't needed to use them recently.+1. I use Digikey constantly, they will ship a single part just asefficiently as 10,000. I've had (free) deliveries of tiny orders within11 hours of ordering.Just a happy customer.--T> > Tom> > > > >

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