Kingtronics have very good quality for radial ceramic capacitors, have ISO 9001:2008 certification. Here some features for your reference.
Class I capacitors: A typical class I capacitor will have a temperature coefficient of 30 ppm/°C. This will typically be fairly linear with temperature. Very high accuracy (~1%) class I capacitors are available (typical ones will be 5% or 10%). The highest accuracy class 1 capacitors are designated C0G or NP0.
Class II capacitors: A typical class II capacitor may change capacitance by 15% over a −55 °C to 85 °C temperature range. A typical class II capacitor will have a dissipation factor of 2.5%. It will have average to poor accuracy (from 10% down to +20/-80%).
Class III capacitors: A typical class III capacitor will change capacitance by -22% to +56% over a temperature range of 10 °C to 55 °C. It will have a dissipation factor of 4%. It will have fairly poor accuracy (commonly, 20%, or +80/-20%). These are typically used for decoupling or in other power supply applications.
There is a three digit code printed on a ceramic capacitor specifying its value. The value is given in picofarads (pF). A letter suffix indicates the tolerance:
C | ± 0.25 pF | M | ±20% |
D | ± 0.5 pF | P | +100 −0% |
J | ± 5% | S | −20 +50% |
K | ±10% | Z | −20 + 80% |