Agree with PRR. I've been kind of tinkering with building a cap reformer/tester which has gone into "shelf" mode.
The basic format is: 450 volt power supply powering (in my case) a series stack of gas regulator tubes. OD3 (150 volt) 0C3 (105 volt) 0B3 (90 volt) and 0A3 (75 volt) One could just as easily use a variac or any other means of making a simple DC power supply. It only has to supply maybe 15 mils. Me, I wanted to use my pile of regulator tubes because they glow nicely. These tubes want between 5 and 30 mils of current and NO MORE. 20 mils is a good design-center. So current limiting resistors are essential. Anyway, the stacked-up tubes create a voltage divider of +75 volts, +180 volts, +285 volts, and +435 volts. They all have the same basing diagram so I can change them to get various voltages. Coming from the junctions of the tubes is yet another resistor calculated to limit current to 5 mils. These can be fed through a 10-ma full scale meter. This was completely a junk-box project, and I had minimal tools at the time so I wanted a project that didn't demand great neatness.
The idea is that one can hook up caps of various voltages and view the steady state current once they charge up. A good capacitor, I have read (but I have to check this) should charge up and in a perfect world would draw no current. In reality, an electrolytic will draw 2-3-4 mils. The less, the better. [Google: reforming electrolytic caps] It's of course also desirable to 1: place the cap in something or other (like a cut-off plastic juice bottle) such that, in case it blows up, it doesn't blow tar and pitch all over the place, and 2: provide a bleeder resistor so that you don't zap yourself. The bleeder current has to be figured into the steady state current of the cap-under-test, as well. You want to run the caps for a good number of hours, perhaps even days, in the reforming process. And you want to know they are good before you put them into anything you want to work and stay working.
I ought to get this finished, it's 90% done and I have a metric ton of caps to test and/or reform.