0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 1293 times.
There are always alternatives without having to get either OEM or magic caps. If you are talking components, you named my big three, but there is also capacitors.com, zalytron, madisound, speakercity.The biggest thing that I replace 1st are electrolytic caps of any kind-especially storage. Some restorations can be a pain, but it's more painful to have those dry out a blow up. For speakers, I stick to dayton metallized film, solen or sonicaps. I know other are other "magic" caps out there, but once you get to 1% metallized film with a very low ESR you've won the battle. Crossover repair is a breeze compared to amps/receivers. The sonically vital caps are those in the path of the tweeter/midrange. The blocking caps are often electrolytic and should be replaced due to degradation, not some massive sonic improvement. Speaker caps that are electrolytic of OEM value are dirt cheap. When I replaced 25 year old caps (even if with OEM spec-no "magic caps), there was a world of improvement in sound. Electrolytics in crossovers degrade in as little as 5 years.