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#1
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I'm about to recap my board (Soundcraft 200B) which is getting hissy on some
channels, and in researching options I found some discussion of bypassing electrolytic capacitors with film caps in parallel. The textbooks I've been using to teach myself basic electronics don't discuss this practice, so before I go ordering a bunch of components I may not even need, I have a few questions: 1. The benefit of bypassing electrolytic caps is typically in improved high frequency response because the lower value film cap will pass higher frequencies better than the higher value one, and vice versa? There's a counter argument about phase shift--how much is that worth worrying about? 2. Are there places where this isn't useful/helpful/worth dealing with? I'm guessing that the 47uf phantom blocking caps would benefit, but what about interstage coupling, etc? 3. The value of the film cap should be 10% of the electrolytic. How critical is that value? 4. In an existing design, you just connect both caps at the same point, soldering the film cap to the point where the electrolytic attaches to the circuit board? In this case there's room on the other side of the circuit board. Since all the points on each side of a parallel network are electrically the same point, this would work, right? Thanks! -jw |
#2
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John Washburn wrote:
1. The benefit of bypassing electrolytic caps is typically in improved high frequency response because the lower value film cap will pass higher frequencies better than the higher value one, and vice versa? There's a counter argument about phase shift--how much is that worth worrying about? The electrolytic can be looked at as a capacitor with a resistor and an inductor in series with it. The parasitic resistance and inductance are a problem at high frequencies. The smaller value film cap will provide a lower-impedance path to shunt those high frequencies around. I don't know what the phase shift counter-argument is. It will indeed change the phase characteristics of the circuit, but it will improve them. This could be a problem in some high-feedback circuits that are designed around particular electrolytics, but it should not be an issue in well-designed gear. 2. Are there places where this isn't useful/helpful/worth dealing with? I'm guessing that the 47uf phantom blocking caps would benefit, but what about interstage coupling, etc? Certainly it's a good idea for interstage coupling. On a single-ended circuit it's even a good idea for supply decoupling caps. 3. The value of the film cap should be 10% of the electrolytic. How critical is that value? Not very. It's a reasonable ballpark, though, but use whatever you have on the sjunkbox. 4. In an existing design, you just connect both caps at the same point, soldering the film cap to the point where the electrolytic attaches to the circuit board? In this case there's room on the other side of the circuit board. Since all the points on each side of a parallel network are electrically the same point, this would work, right? Yes. Or (with an axial electrolytic) you can piggyback them on the same side. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#3
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"John Washburn" wrote in message
... I'm about to recap my board (Soundcraft 200B) which is getting hissy on some channels, and in researching options I found some discussion of bypassing electrolytic capacitors with film caps in parallel. The textbooks I've been using to teach myself basic electronics don't discuss this practice, so before I go ordering a bunch of components I may not even need, I have a few questions: 1. The benefit of bypassing electrolytic caps is typically in improved high frequency response because the lower value film cap will pass higher frequencies better than the higher value one, and vice versa? Not really. The bypassed electrolytic has lower impedance at high frequencies than the electrolytic by itself. In power supply caps that translates to better filtering of high-frequency components, including RFI. When the electrolytic is a coupling cap, the impedance at the highest audio frequencies, even unbypassed, is low enough not to matter. The putative advantage of bypassing audio coupling caps is that the bypass cap, being film, suffers less from dielectric absorption, particularly at high frequencies. My own experience is that bypassing electrolytic coupling caps indeed reduces the amount of audible high-frequency "hash" on things like sibilants, but not as well as replacing the electrolytics with film caps. Of course, this often isn't possible due to space limitations. There's a counter argument about phase shift--how much is that worth worrying about? Not at all; my tests show *less* phase shift in a bypassed cap assembly than in an unbypassed electrolytic. 2. Are there places where this isn't useful/helpful/worth dealing with? I'm guessing that the 47uf phantom blocking caps would benefit, but what about interstage coupling, etc? Interstage coupling with electrolytics is already problematic, as typically the (polarized) electrolytic is used without a DC voltage across it, a perfect example of bad design. Bypassing is a good idea; connecting up a *pair* of electrolytics with a resistor to the power supply may be better: + + -----||---------||------ | 1 Meg | V+ You then bypass the nose-to-nose electrolytics with a film cap. Note that the effective capacitance is half of the capacitance of each electrolytic, so that if you used 100uF caps the combined capacitance would be 500uF. All this is awkward and space-consuming, yes. 3. The value of the film cap should be 10% of the electrolytic. How critical is that value? That's a good value, but there will be measurable benefits to high-frequency impedance even bypassing a 1000uF electrolytic with a 0.1uF-1uF film cap. Typical electrolytics have their resonant point (the frequency where they stop being capacitors and turn into inductors) anywhere from around 6kHz (3300uF caps) to 30kHz (100uF caps). Small film caps remain capacitative up to the 200kHz region (0.47uF), 600kHz region (0.1uF) or well into the megahertz region (.01uF caps, ceramic discs). More specific data coming up in an article for audioXpress, probably about a year from now. 4. In an existing design, you just connect both caps at the same point, soldering the film cap to the point where the electrolytic attaches to the circuit board? In this case there's room on the other side of the circuit board. Since all the points on each side of a parallel network are electrically the same point, this would work, right? Right. Peace, Paul |
#4
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You then bypass the nose-to-nose electrolytics with a film cap. Note that
the effective capacitance is half of the capacitance of each electrolytic, so that if you used 100uF caps the combined capacitance would be 50uF. 500 was a typo..... |
#5
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![]() "Eric K. Weber" wrote in message ... You then bypass the nose-to-nose electrolytics with a film cap. Note that the effective capacitance is half of the capacitance of each electrolytic, so that if you used 100uF caps the combined capacitance would be 50uF. 500 was a typo..... Quite right; thank you! Peace, PPPPPPaul |
#6
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"John Washburn" wrote in message
I'm about to recap my board (Soundcraft 200B) which is getting hissy on some channels, and in researching options I found some discussion of bypassing electrolytic capacitors with film caps in parallel. Recapping can be a darn good idea when you have problems like these. Did I ever tell you about the time I thought my stereo receiver was losing its bass, and I found that virtually every electrolytic coupling cap had lost 90% of its nameplate capacitance. Boy, did it sound better after I did THAT. The textbooks I've been using to teach myself basic electronics don't discuss this practice, so before I go ordering a bunch of components I may not even need, I have a few questions: 1. The benefit of bypassing electrolytic caps is typically in improved high frequency response because the lower value film cap will pass higher frequencies better than the higher value one, and vice versa? There's a counter argument about phase shift--how much is that worth worrying about? I don't know of a counter argument based on phase shift. There is a counter argument based on common sense - why do something that has no tangible benefits? The answer to that challenge is that there may sometimes be some tangible benefits. But not always. The stated purposes for adding these caps relates to two well-known effects - series inductance and dielectric absorption. Every electrolytic capacitor, no every capacitor effectively has a little inductor that is effectively in series with it. One historical way to quantify this inductance is to give the frequency where this inductance resonates the capacitance of the capacitor. Above this frequency, the capacitor has lost its capacitive effects due to the series inductance. I was surprised to learn that the self-resonant frequency of a common wire-leaded 0.1 uF ceramic capacitor might be like 150 MHz. The major source of inductance in that case was simply the lead wires. At times the series inductance of a part may include more than just the lead inductance, as the part itself may have appreciable inductance inside. Aluminum electrolytic and larger film capacitors are commonly made up of sheets of insulation and foil wound up in a roll. This is an obvious opportunity to unintentionally introduce inductance. OTOH, a skillful designer can work with the geometry and largely avoid excess inductance. There are such things as low ESR and low ESL electrolytic capacitors. Most of them end up in non-audio applications or in power supplies and power amps. Dielectric absorption is a more recent issue for audio, maybe 30 years old. Dielectric absorption refers to the tendency of dielectric materials to experience longer-term changes, and produce a capacitor that acts like it has a larger capacitor in series with a large resistor, connected across the capacitor's terminals. In such cases quantification is off the essence. It's easy to say that "The benefit of bypassing electrolytic caps is typically in improved high frequency response", but what constitutes high frequencies, and what constitutes a useful improvement? These days it is relatively easy to make incredibly accurate frequency response measurements, within a hundredth of a dB or better. Yet, AFAIK nobody has ever produced an measurement of say a good commercial mic preamp (to eliminate contrived situations), and showed that its frequency response in the audio range was significantly improved by paralleling all of the electrolytics with film caps. If you run the numbers, you find out the reason why - series inductance in most elecrolytics isn't a problem, and those few cases where it is, it gets dealt with in the original design. Why? Because most ESL creates impedance in the audio range that are a few ohms or less, and most coupling capacitors drive resistances that are a thousand ohms or more - typically ten thousand ohms or more. One ohm series reactance versus a ten thousand ohm load leads to a loss of less than a thousandth of a dB. If you understand dielectric absorption well, you just might hurt yourself laughing when someone suggests that you address DA in a large electrolytic by paralleling it with a film cap. Remember, we earlier found that DA was due to a phantom capacitance that is in parallel with the cap. It's darn hard to reduce parallel capacitance due to DA by *adding* parallel capacitors, is it not? 2. Are there places where this isn't useful/helpful/worth dealing with? I'm guessing that the 47uf phantom blocking caps would benefit, but what about interstage coupling, etc? Educate yourself. Learn how to make accurate frequency response of audio gear, which is pretty cheap and easy to do these days. Then tack in some parallel caps, and see what happens. What does it take to make accurate FR measurements of audio gear? A PC with even a mediocre sound card and a freebie piece of software called "Audio Rightmark". What about all those deadly earnest listening tests where capacitor upgrades saved some precious piece of legacy gear from the scrap heap? Well, either the caps that were there to start with, had dried out and stopped being the caps their nameplate described, or well unhh have you ever heard of expectation effects, or placebo effects? Let me tell you about all the DBTs that conclusively showed an audible difference due to paralleling an electrolytic in a well-designed, well-maintained piece of electronic equipment. () That was quick, now wasn't it? 3. The value of the film cap should be 10% of the electrolytic. How critical is that value? Depends on the application, but in the current context the value is so non critical that you often find that adding it or removing it has no effect. 4. In an existing design, you just connect both caps at the same point, soldering the film cap to the point where the electrolytic attaches to the circuit board? In this case there's room on the other side of the circuit board. Since all the points on each side of a parallel network are electrically the same point, this would work, right? Right, and that is why paralleling caps with film caps does nothing useful for DA. |
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