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The tube analogue section has its own power suppy, but I haven't opened it up yet to see how many capacitors are there.
According to my DAC designer, it is the power supply in the tube analogue section that is probably causing the rectifier tube arcing. He is going to install a resistor to prevent this.
They are 22,000 microFarads each, not picoFarads.
Aha! Now I can see what DAC it is from the picture! When you said "These are electrolytic caps a little bigger than the size of a D cell battery", I figured they would have to be 22,000uF. Regardless of what series/parallel configuration they are wired in or where they are used, I can't think of too many components of any type that have that much capacitance. Many large brutish power amplifiers have only 100,000uF to 200,000uF capacitance per channel. Hopefully at some future point in time, the mystery will be revealed along with a nice interior photo of this DAC-beast. Steve
Not unheard of. Over at AudioKarma, there is a guy that claimed 11,000uf in his Cd player and 150,000uf in his preamplifier. Either he or another uses two 50 lb power transformers in a preamplifier. Go figure.
The fact that he didn't foresee rectifier tube arcing from the analogue power supply is somewhat puzzling and a little annoying,
He does have some controversial ideas about DACs (eg, he doesn't buy into the current bandwagon of blaming most of the ills of digital audio on jitter).
Sure, I didn't say unheard of, just that I didn't know of too many. I knew Wyred 4 Sound used 88,000uF in the power supply of their DAC and 164,560uF in the power supply of their STP-SE preamplifier (both not terribly expensive components), but 814,000uF - I gotta see this thing! Steve
To be honest, I'd say that is poor engineering. Maybe it's just marketing, bigger is better etc Not meaning to get anyone's nose out of joint.