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Hi Doug,
It is worth doing, if you're comfortable with fiddly bench work:

The trick is to get it open.

Once when I posted this a few years back, Bob Wennerstrom remarked I was doing it the hard way. He said it would be much easier to uncrimp the bezel; that the bit of mangling won't show behind the escutcheon anyway. I tried it, and he is absolutely right.

Try to keep from cutting through, to avoid debris inside the clock mostly.

Use a sturdy knife to finish the cut.

The capacitors are 100 microfarad electrolytic (2) with radial leads. The voltage rating should be at least 16V, but I think you'll find modern units 25V and higher in the same size as the originals. Observe polarity.

Test before you seal it back up.

I used foil tape.

--
Art Benstein near Baltimore
By the time a man is wise enough to watch his step, he's too old to go anywhere.
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