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Electronics Repair (sci.electronics.repair) Discussion of repairing electronic equipment. Topics include requests for assistance, where to obtain servicing information and parts, techniques for diagnosis and repair, and annecdotes about success, failures and problems. |
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ahhh, just to put my oar in.
While I don't believe all the high end audio snake oil claims about this or that brand of capacitor. Going through a good quality amp and replacing the coupling/filter caps with polypropylene polystyrene types can make a subtle but audible difference even to the non "golden eared" set. Yes it's a lot of work and finding all the right values can be difficult and expensive. And the plastic film types tend to be 2-3 times larger, which can be a problem. Is it worth it? good question. If it ain't broke... If your amp is 20+ years old just doing a general replacement with new capacitors, fancy one's or not, will probably make a world of difference. Also if the rest of your system is not "up to snuff", the difference might not be noticeable. As a first experiment try replacing the capacitors in your speaker crossover. There size is usually not a problem and you can gang 'em up if needed to get the right value. If that makes a discernible difference to you then consider pressing on. good luck and have fun, tomh |
#2
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In article T_2yh.300$y3.39@llnews, tomh wrote:
ahhh, just to put my oar in. While I don't believe all the high end audio snake oil claims about this or that brand of capacitor. Going through a good quality amp and replacing the coupling/filter caps with polypropylene polystyrene types can make a subtle but audible difference even to the non "golden eared" set. Yes it's a lot of work and finding all the right values can be difficult and expensive. And the plastic film types tend to be 2-3 times larger, which can be a problem. Is it worth it? good question. If it ain't broke... If your amp is 20+ years old just doing a general replacement with new capacitors, fancy one's or not, will probably make a world of difference. Also if the rest of your system is not "up to snuff", the difference might not be noticeable. As a first experiment try replacing the capacitors in your speaker crossover. There size is usually not a problem and you can gang 'em up if needed to get the right value. If that makes a discernible difference to you then consider pressing on. If you know how to work speakers, then you might be able to change caps. I assume your talking about replacing electrolytics with p-p types. The ESR will change and you cannot use the same values of capacitance. Of course, the tolerance of the lytics is pretty bad. Replacing electrolytics in amplifier coupling stages is a good idea just for stability, and frequency and phase response can make drastic changes with old lytics. Amps don't have to be 20 years old to have problems. greg |
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