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Hi Hugh, I have replaced GK-1R C1, first with a 2.2uf Sonicap, and then at Jens' suggestion, a 22uf BG NX. I tried to break in the BK outside the GK-1, as described in the above post. That "external breakin" proceeded for almost 3 weeks, 2 weeks attached to the tape out loop of an old cheap reciever and one week attached to the analog out of a Sony DVD/CDP.On Monday night, I placed the "broken in" BG NX cap at C1, replacing the Sonicap. The sound with the BG cap was thin and bright. After 48 hours of burn in, there is no major change in the BG. I have the BG oriented with the long lead toward the input pin... is this OK?, and is there any likelihood that BG orientation could cause a significant change in sonics?My intention right now is to burn in up to 100 hours and evaluate, unless you suggest swaping the BG lead orientation.Many thanksPeter
Hi Peter,The large foil polyprops have such voluminous geometry that in the confined pcb of the GK1 you could experience hum and RFI intrusion. The very small 22uF NX is probably as good a cap, but because of its small size, there's much less likelihood of these problems, AND the higher capacitance lessens phase shift at very low frequencies, which is alleged to have sonic benefits (though I've not tested this).The longer lead should, if one assumes this is half way positive, go to the preamp side; the shorter to the signal input side.You cannot expect much change in the first couple of days. I'd say swap around the cap, and break it in for at least ten days. Then have a critical listen.
Gentlemen,I listened hard to the 22uf BG NX at C1 and it was hard to find fault. After 12-14 days of accumulated burn-in time, with a lightning strike mixed in for good measure, I thought it was perhaps still a bit rough on complex passages with massed strings in the upper registers, high brass, etc., but really it was pretty good. Definitely nothing to complain about. On Saturday I had a few extra hours, and decided to put the 2.2uf Sonicap back in, just to do a fair comparison before drawing conclusions. It took about 15 minutes playing cuts from Jens' My Music to be pretty sure and another several hours last night listening to some of my best CDs (for example, http://www.referencerecordings.com/minnesota.asp#rr95 ) to be sure. As I told my wife, it was hard to complain about the 22uf BG, but I am in love with the Sonicap.... to my ears, it is almost magical in its effect. The instruments are more real, more vital, colors are brighter, textural contrasts more palpable. Even though it is more resolving in this position, the Sonicap is clearly smoother too. I did not notice any difference in noise (just paused the CDP and listened to the speaker cones) between the two caps. I mounted the Sonicap (diam ~ 16.5mm) vertically on the component side of the PCB... I had to kind of wedge it in, but I didn't have to move any components to fit it in. So, based on my experience, I think it might be worthwhile to try a good film cap at C1. I'm not advocating for Sonicap... it was simply the first film cap I chose (because speaker builders seem to think it's very good and they are reasonably priced at $7.60 each). I would be eager to hear what you and others might find, but I will probably stick with the Sonicap unless a consensus emerges that something else is a lot better. This cap at C1 was such a big step forward that I'm thinking I might bypass them with 0.022uf Relcap TFTs to squeeze out the last drop of performance here. I will post these observations on AC in the next few days. Now I will move on to building the Orion... Take care,Peter