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Actually I don't really have preferences here. I will predominantly use standard Electrolytic caps in parallel with small value film caps for the power supply. The RFI/EMI filter I use at the AC input wipes out the HF content before it hits the transformer.Regulation and grounding technique go a long way here and switching different brands has not lead to sonic improvement or any difference that I can hear or measure. In the audio signal circuits; (not power supply decoupling) I will use either film or npo ceramic.
Hi Jerry; Large electrolytic caps do very well filtering low frequency components. I have found many specified for 120 Hz, which is the frequency that most diode rectifiers are set to do. That specification is called E.S.R. This is the abbreviation for equivalent Series Resistance. Due to the series inductance that they have they are typically not very good at higher frequencies. Paralleling electrolytic caps with small value films or ceramics helps the higher frequency filtering. This all happens in the power supply.Hope this helps.
Thanks, I didn't know that the filter caps also served as the power reserve caps. For example, Odyssey mono amps use 240,000 uF of capacitance. Maybe I'm mistaken, but I do not recall seeing any smaller value caps in parallel with the large bank of electrolytics. Are these both filter and storage caps?
Hi Dejan, dan and Hugh,where do you all see technology regarding amps going within the next 5,10 and 25 years? ...Raj
I deliberately do not let the latest fads influence my designs. That's why you don't see the equipment I manufacture for sale in the used audio equipment directories, except when a critic decides he needs some fast cash. I attempt to do as neutral a design as possible. This is not popular and I don't give a d**n. My design influences come from a number of sources but one major one is instrumentation. If you were to ask my basic design philosophy I would say I just make tools for the analysis of recorded music, no more and no less.Class A in the strictest sense of the word really does not exist in solid state audio. It's really hard biased AB design. And finally yes, many designers tell people what they want to hear. There is plenty of evidence of that on Audio Asylum as far as I am concerned. The reason you won't see thru the fog and hype is that practically no one is doing the testing that needs to be done to find out, and then explaining this to consumers. In short; if you hang around here you'll learn a bit from people such as myself, Dejan, and Hugh, and if I forgot anyone else I apologize.
Hi Dejan,What did you really want to achieve in this particular topic?
Has it been achieved?
Are we not drawing somewhere near a conclusion, Dan's report on cd recording and also his statement about the state of speaker design, point to the fact they're designs aren't being allowed to shine to their respective potential.
I've built a kit amp and pre (white noise), it's awesome,on decent recordings the sound really is good, but I do feel some dissapointment, why? Because the medium I use for my source isn't being recorded well enough, not the fault of the equipment but the fault of BIG BROTHER, who just wants to make his millions. Anyone whose main source of income is audio, is likely to rip someone off at one time or another, I've yet to meet anyone whose convinced me otherwise. You're lucky Dejan, you understand electronics, you know what you're really buying, the rest of us get caught up in hype., I've got the equipment but where's the quality recordings to take advantage of it? I don't want to pay lashings just for 'audiophile' discs, some of it isn't the music I want. I go out buy a disc in a genre I like, only to find that the recording distorted!