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Now, if I do decide to perform a cap rebuild - at some later point - the purpose of the cap rebuild would be to not change the sound - but to expand on detail, clarity, imaging, and wider sound-stage that the speakers could produce. This would require some higher ended caps than the Solens, but I still am curios to see if anyone performed a cap rebuild, what they replaced it with, and what their personal experience was with the before-and-after effects of cap rebuild.
Hi,Totally don't want to be disrespectful but your components aren't in the same league as your speakers. What were your previous speakers? I have a pair of Salk Sound HT3's and the rest of my system is top notch and the speakers always rise to the occasion.This is another thread on the Selah Audio circle which discusses the pros and cons of making changes in the cover. Check out Rick Craig's responses as he is a speaker designer.http://www.audiocircle.com/index.php?topic=134561.0You have a great pair of speakers which you can build the rest of your system around.Cheers Rod
I would agree that better crossover components make for better sounding speakers. Solens are not so great IME, I think Clarity ESA would be a step up, and Clarity MR or Jupiter copper foil caps would be even better but lots of cash. I also like Mills resistors and foil inductors.
I thought the Solens were grainy and had less detail vs the ESAs...
I doubt that anyone wants another thread devoted to a yes the are--no they aren't cap debate, so I'll shut up after this post. I just like to express a little skepticism whenever the opportunity arises, but mainly because I spent my professional career helping to enforce FTC advertising regulations. Manufacturers of normal goods like cars and analgesics and energy-saving devices are required to back up their claims with competent and reliable scientific evidence. Designer caps aren't normal products, and normal people don't buy them, so the FTC has never bothered to challenge their claims. But in principle, the burden of proof is on the sellers of these things to provide controlled tests and plausible scientific reasoning to document their claims. Testimonials by buyers aren't considered adequate substantiation for very good reasons, and I always hope that someday one designer cap manufacturer will step up to the plate and lay out the evidence for their superiority. Probably not going to happen.
... I always hope that someday one designer cap manufacturer will step up to the plate and lay out the evidence for their superiority. Probably not going to happen.
This has been out for a couple years now. And if you care to challenge your own cynicism, contact Clarity and they'll give you plenty more data used in their research. www.hificollective.co.uk/sites/default/files/claritycapmr_whitepaper.pdf
Methinks the "tire testing without a pressure gauge" syndrome is at work here. If you don't measure the cap removed with a capacitor meter and replace it with another of identical measured value you are just fooling yourselves. A capacitor is not the value marked on it, it is the value that it actually is. For example a 10% tolerance 10 uF cap can be anywhere between 9uF and 11uF and be in spec. So you can be off by 20% from one part to another. In some circuits changing the value of a capacitor by 10 or 20 percent will create a circuit change you can easily hear. This is especially true if the stereo unit or matched speaker pairs had been built originally with selected matched pair capacitors and or resistors and coils. A 20 percent value change from one speaker of a pair to the other can easily cause imaging and phase shift issues that are audible and this has nothing to do with the "wonder" quality or excessively high price of the so called premium grade capacitor.
So how many of you actually use a capacitor meter when cap rolling??? Frank Van Alstine
I admit that I don't measure every cap I use, although I always take frequency response and impedance measurements at the end to see if the overall system is in spec. I've actually found greater variation in inductors than in the types of poly caps I'm using. Electrolytics don't do so well.
Without a capacitor meter you will never be sure. If you don't match values when capacitor rolling anticipation bias rears its ugly head again.Frank Van Alstine