For the part I was telling, yes. You reset the cap by soldering it, then
let it rest at room temperature and cap value slowly decrease.
Say 2% per decade for X7R.
That's why manufacturers (at least the serious ones) have some appnotes
saying you have to wait before checking caps (in circuit testers for ex.)
after they've been soldered in case you need to do so.
> What I am seeing is happening at a normal operating
> voltage not far above room temp. 24 hrs under power and *every* one of
> the boards shifts the 20 Hz attenuation from -0.95 dB (give or take a
> couple of 0.01 dB) to -1.05 dB (again about 0.02 magnitude variation). I
> didn't even notice this for the first few hundred boards tested for
> frequency response. But the current order is a lot larger than usual
> and I'm staring at these numbers all day long. So I finally realized
> how consistent the connection is to before and after burn in. It is
> virtually a perfect correlation.
>
That is 0.1dB, or 1%. This might come from either temperature elevation or
another possibility is that, if your caps are DC biased, that under bias
there's also a slight and _slow_ disaccomodation (takes minutes to tens
of minutes to settle).
Did you changed the caps ref (smaller package)? The bias disaccomodation
depends on the electric field value, so the smaller the cap the bigger it
changes under the same bias conditions.
> I don't think this is a matter of just time as the boards have been
> sitting for varying amounts of time since they were soldered. But the
> burn in time is pretty consistent since that is the bottle neck in
> testing and after 23.5 hours they are outta there to make way for the
> next batch.
--
Thanks,
Fred.