Re: Electrolytic capacitors stored for a year or more on the shelf are useless?
It would be interesting to know the real reason for 'de-forming' instead of speculating. Certainly in the past it was common practice to pre-charge old electrolytics through a resistor to limit the current if they had been in storage for a while, the process was called 're-forming'. I suspect the reason they deteriorate is something to do with them returning to their manufactured state before being polarized, in other words partially losing their polarization. In the old days of high voltage electrolytics, the trick was to add a 10K resistor in series with them, apply full rated voltage and monitor the voltage across the capacitor, it would sometimes take a minute or more to reach full charge, far longer than the RC time constant would predict. After discharging, it would work normally afterwards.
I know of one electrolytic manufacturer that has a room where they test capacitors before shipping, some of these will have been in storage until needed. They connect hundreds of them in parallel and power them up for several hours in a 'bomb shelter' room. After powering them down, an operator visually inspects and removes the exploded or bulging ones and the rest are shipped.
I too have capacitors 50+ years old, their ESR may not be perfect but it probably wasn't very good on day one compared to newer types. They still work perfectly well.
Brian.