Do you recommend any sort of protection for the nude cap, from oxidation for example? Maybe dipping in wax or coating with varnish?
I would advise to take low dielectric constant materials to protect the nude caps and if possible with damping resonance properties
jtwrace,That's the same combination I plan to try in my Havana DAC (different values though), so I'd be interested to hear what your take on the sonics is like.-- Jim
What do you use to keep that from coming unraveled?
Quote from: AudioCap on 22 May 2009, 08:43 amAmpohm announced yesterday 22nd May that they are finally launching a range of paper-in-oil, copper-foil capacitors in 630V (0.001uF to 1.0uF) and 300V (2.2uF to 10.0uF).Thank you for the information. It seemed like they would eventually introduce a copper version if they already had tin and aluminum. I'm curious if they'll be a big step up or just slightly different.The new beeswax caps look promising, too. So many choices!Best,KT
Ampohm announced yesterday 22nd May that they are finally launching a range of paper-in-oil, copper-foil capacitors in 630V (0.001uF to 1.0uF) and 300V (2.2uF to 10.0uF).
Just to add a short list of some other polypropylene film/foil caps.....One of the most readily available low-cost film/foil capacitors is the Dayton series (http://www.parts-express.com/dayton-film-capacitors.cfm). I've been meaning to try these out some time, but I haven't had a reason to use them. I've read some good things about them. Be careful since only the ones I linked are film/foil, whereas the other Dayton caps are metalized. The orange drop 716P is probably a better known film/foil cap with a love/hate reputation. The Panasonic ecqp series is another one, but that went out of production at the end of last year.
Just kind of curious. I see tolerances of anywhere from 2 percent to 20 percent in the caps mentioned. Changing the value of a capacitor will pretty obviously change the circuit operation aside from the composition of the part in question.Nowhere to I see any mention of exact matching of values between samples to assure that the test was not just listening to value changes, not something more subtile.Capacitors are the values they are, not the values printed on them.Regards,Frank Van Alstine
Quote from: avahifi on 4 Jun 2008, 08:40 pmJust kind of curious. I see tolerances of anywhere from 2 percent to 20 percent in the caps mentioned. Changing the value of a capacitor will pretty obviously change the circuit operation aside from the composition of the part in question.Nowhere to I see any mention of exact matching of values between samples to assure that the test was not just listening to value changes, not something more subtile.Capacitors are the values they are, not the values printed on them.Regards,Frank Van Alstine If the pictures of all the various caps are of the caps under test I see value differences from .047uf to 2.7uf...