0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 116486 times.
OK, now I'll stop. For a while.Pat
Daryl, what gives you the right to form an opinon about capacitor problems? This better be good!
It does not take a tremendous amount of experience, knowledge, intuition, creativity, or even chutzpah, to take cheap shots at someone else's work without any factual basis.
Quote from: john curl on 4 Jul 2007, 12:07 amDaryl, what gives you the right to form an opinon about capacitor problems? This better be good!QuoteIt does not take a tremendous amount of experience, knowledge, intuition, creativity, or even chutzpah, to take cheap shots at someone else's work without any factual basis.No cheap shots here.I think I made some good points.
Film capacitors are nearly perfect componets (especially polypropylene and teflon, polyester is much less perfect but still impressive).There are differences but too small to hear since the componets are so nearly perfect.Also the influence of a capacitor is strongest at the corner frequency of the circuit (declining above and below) so in most applications (coupling, bypass) you can eliminate the capacitors influence by locating the corner frequency well below the audio band (use a large value) making even poorly performing capacitors have no signifigant effect upon the circuit.The article you linked as well as the articles from Jung/Marsh and Jung/Curl are utterly foolish.They spend most of their time showing you the operation of capacitors you would never use for audio.Then they waste more time operating polarized capacitors reverse-biased/unbiased which even a novice knows not to do (but apparently not them).Finally they draw conclusions which their own measurements don't support.
Film capacitors are nearly perfect componets (especially polypropylene and teflon, polyester is much less perfect but still impressive).
There are differences but too small to hear since the componets are so nearly perfect.
Also the influence of a capacitor is strongest at the corner frequency of the circuit (declining above and below) so in most applications (coupling, bypass) you can eliminate the capacitors influence by locating the corner frequency well below the audio band (use a large value) making even poorly performing capacitors have no signifigant effect upon the circuit.
The article you linked as well as the articles from Jung/Marsh and Jung/Curl are utterly foolish.
They spend most of their time showing you the operation of capacitors you would never use for audio.
Then they waste more time operating polarized capacitors reverse-biased/unbiased which even a novice knows not to do (but apparently not them).
Finally they draw conclusions which their own measurements don't support.