I also have had a recent concern about one channel performing differently than the other. I had an online purchase of Oliver Nelson's "The Blues and the Abstract Truth" a sealed Impulse record that stars Paul Cambers, Eric Dolphy, Bill Evans, Roy Haynes, and Freddie Hubbard. I broke the seal and put it on the turntable. The left channel was muted during play.? The first thought I had was that I was ripped off by the online purchase. I played it several times again but each time I had the same result. I swapped cables all along the component chain but it seemed that the left channel from the turntable was outputting low volume. Other LPs work fine.
Well I've been burning in this Cornet2 with the Russian FT-3 coupling caps in place for some time now. All that I play is sounding very nice. One thing that I have noticed is that the Cornet2 will starkly reveal the quality of the record being played. If the record has audiophile quality, then you hear glorious music. If the record has been beat up, then all the mistreatment of the vinyl will be heard. But, often the music that is being played sounds so good that small background noise is forgiven.
Anyway, I decided to try the Oliver Nelson recording again. This time to my astonishment, both channels played flawlessly!
YYYEEESSS!!!!!!!!!
What a fantastic piece! Outstanding music and very well recorded.
That's one I'll never understand but I'm so happy that problem decided to disappear.
One word of caution with these Russian Teflon capacitors; be careful with your sequence of equipment turn on. If the equipment with the Teflon caps has been off for awhile, they can create a burst of static when turned back on that, in a preamp, could potential be amplified to levels that might take out one of your prized speaker drivers. I am hoping the this might be a part of the burn in process and that this problem also goes away. My turn on sequence now is; turn on the preamp and wait several minutes before turning on the power amplifier.
I have turn on all equipment at the same time in the past and, even with the Muting switch on the amplifier at -20dB and the volume turned way down, I have heard horrifying static from the speakers that is extremely excruciating.
My thought is that with a little caution, the Teflon caps are a fantastic addition. I have noticed that they add so much to the liveliness of the music that I would absolutely not give them up.