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It acts more as a power reservoir, so having a little longer leads isn't going to be as noticeable as the performance gain from a substantially better capacitors. The decoupling of RF and what not is a job taken care of to a much larger degree by a few smaller capacitors, and capacitors in your load. Think of the distance the wires run to the load from the PSU, a very small run on this cap is going to be like having a slightly longer umbilical cord. What you can however do is mount another small cap with leads that are very short directly to the pads. However I'm going to give you a little bit of a different recipe. Use a 1uf film, and the cheapest, crappiest, 300-400uf cap you can find. Solder them as short of leads possible right onto the pads, and then have the large one mounted off board. You can even use a couple of these. 871-B32560J1105Kand maybe this will be a crappy enough capacitor 647-UVR1E331MPD1TD . If you have any cheap capacitors from a chinese product use one of those, some off-brand cap.
For audio gear I would dampen the transformer from the primary side. Secondary snubbers aren't often appreciated by some pretty serious people on DIYaudio. Good idea, but the result isn't what you want.
Dampening can happen through the primaries to the secondaries. Some people are into snubbers. They often look great on paper, others think they do some very wrong things. The solution of avoiding the issues of them on the secondary, is to dampen through the primary. If you're interested in this, I'll ask my guy who's into resonation control more than I am.
The older and IMO better units do not have an IEC.
If you want a serious upgrade to you TDA7297 get some Belden 8412 for speaker wire. Attach the shield to circuit ground. DO NOT attach negative output to the shield.The TDA7297 outputs are balanced. They need the shield, and for it to be grounded correctly. Run the shield as close to the output terminals as you can.
I just mean the most full coverage you can have, the better, all the way up to the board. The shield would connect to the - DC terminal in your picture. This could be done with another small wire soldered to the shield tails.Remember, the - for outputs is not a ground, so whomever is reading don't think you can connect the shield there.