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I put in a pair of .22 Jupiter caps into my speaker crossovers on my Serenity Acoustic Super 7's. I used them to bypass the 10uf tweeter cap and the 15uf midrange cap, both of which are ClarityCap MR. The improvement was, uhm, substantial. It's like switching from a good SS amp to a good tube amp. Less edge, less hardness, more natural instrumental sound. Greater clarity at lower levels, which means I have to turn the volume up less but can still hear everything. Better defined soundstage space and instrumental placement within that space. Things like that.
Tyson, what bypass caps did the Jupiters replace?
Jupiter Paper/Wax/Copper Foil caps [2] delivered tomorrow, replacing Exotica TFT caps in my Moth Audio s45.
Hi everyone,i am a newbie,i have question,if i can find a exactly same value capacitor to instead the old one,what can i do.and my capacitor is 4.7uf 250V,so can i use 5uf 310V?and sound will bad or...............?thanksRegardsSam
4.7 is actually a standard cap value ... so you should be able to find one. Alternatively, as the caps you are looking at are probably +/- 5% in value ... if you can find a low-value "5uF" ... it will be almost 4.7uF.The higher voltage rating is fine.Andy
thanks for reply.one more question,Capacitor need match??
The only issue I have with xx / wax caps is the environmental one; I hesitate to use them when heat, such as in some power amplifier or vacuum tube situations, or very low temperatures (eg car audio in the Northern Hemisphere) could be an issue. When that is not a problem, have at 'er.[Yes that's why I thought to check out polyfilm copper ones to compare against the wax n paper copper versions but I think it might be ok in a home speaker crossover ,I hope.quote]
The only issue I have with xx / wax caps is the environmental one; I hesitate to use them when heat, such as in some power amplifier or vacuum tube situations, or very low temperatures (eg car audio in the Northern Hemisphere) could be an issue. When that is not a problem, have at 'er.