ev13wt
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While I bit late, I do apologize for stepping over the line with my comments.
Totally agreeSomeone might know better than I, but the 30 years might have more of an impact on the sound than the kind.
I've heard so many different opinions on other forums regarding recapping vintage gear(replacing old electrolytic capacitators). I've recapped one vintage Harmon Kardon Amp and plan on restoring my Yamaha M-4 amp.
I've used Panasonic's low ESR series(FM, M) and Solens but I've heard plenty say to go with "higher" grade caps like Elna, Rubycon blackgate, Nichicron, etc at about 2x-3x the costs.
Many claim that the different caps have characteristics like very bright or deep bass reproduction......some won't use anything lower than Nichicron claiming how superior these caps costs.
The amp/speakers recapped with panasonics sound awesome so far.
bypass and interstage coupling are two different functions.To be clear, we are talking by-pass (inter-stage coupling) caps only here.
The definitive work on this was published in Audio in 1980, by Walter G. Jung and Richard Marsh. Part 1 here, Part 2 here.Caps age with time, they are, in effect, electrical shock absorbers.
I restore vintage hifi gear as a side job. Recapping is a common request. Each capacitor manufacturer uses slightly different insulating materials for their dielectric which in turn, has a different "voice:" Even within the same manufacturer, they make different series. One thing I try to be careful about is not using too fast of a cap in vintage gear. A lot of the old transistors were grainy, too fast of a cap will reveal this in an unpleasant way. Also different ears have different preferences. (There are forums that discuss these nuances in detail) All that said, I use Elna Silmic II for SS gear. They are a nice balance of fast and smooth, my customers seem to really like the results. For older tube gear I use Sprague Orange Drops. Again most customers like the results and the price is not outrageously expensive. Never change the capacitance value, you may however increase the voltage rating, never lower.
For power supplies, sometimes you can only use what fits. I like Nichicon "Gold Tune" and "Super Through" for SS, Sprague for tube amps, if I can find one the fits. Here you can increase both voltage and capacitance values, within reason. Too high capacitance (>2x) will cause excessive inrush current on start-up, (nuisance fuse blowing or worse)