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#1
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I'd like to increase the filter capacitance of a 21 year old subwoofer amp from the
current two 10,000uf 75v caps to a pair of 20,000uf 75v caps. The current rectifier is a Fagor FB2502. Do you think this rectifier can handle the increase or should I upgrade it? Also, for reference, the amp uses a single power chip per side as opposed to discrete xistors if that matters. Thanks. |
#2
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"Spica" wrote ...
I'd like to increase the filter capacitance of a 21 year old subwoofer amp from the current two 10,000uf 75v caps to a pair of 20,000uf 75v caps. The current rectifier is a Fagor FB2502. Do you think this rectifier can handle the increase or should I upgrade it? Also, for reference, the amp uses a single power chip per side as opposed to discrete xistors if that matters. Thanks. Probably no easy way to establish that except to try it. If it holds, then you didn't need to beef it up. If it blows, then you were thinking about replacing it anyway. :-) |
#3
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Richard Crowley wrote:
"Spica" wrote ... I'd like to increase the filter capacitance of a 21 year old subwoofer amp from the current two 10,000uf 75v caps to a pair of 20,000uf 75v caps. The current rectifier is a Fagor FB2502. Do you think this rectifier can handle the increase or should I upgrade it? Also, for reference, the amp uses a single power chip per side as opposed to discrete xistors if that matters. Thanks. Probably no easy way to establish that except to try it. If it holds, then you didn't need to beef it up. If it blows, then you were thinking about replacing it anyway. :-) I can't comment on the actual device, that would be to go beyond my skill level, but doubling the filter capacitance of my Linsley-Hood dual 75 watt amp had a beneficiary influence on its bass range. Undetected alumium spill from drilling the holes had a negative influence later ... I gave it to someone who might be able to use the very fine mains transformer in some other context. A learning experience. Kind regards Peter Larsen |
#4
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Spica wrote:
I'd like to increase the filter capacitance of a 21 year old subwoofer amp from the current two 10,000uf 75v caps to a pair of 20,000uf 75v caps. The current rectifier is a Fagor FB2502. Do you think this rectifier can handle the increase or should I upgrade it? Also, for reference, the amp uses a single power chip per side as opposed to discrete xistors if that matters. Thanks. Why? |
#5
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On 4/11/2010 7:46 PM cjt spake thus:
Spica wrote: I'd like to increase the filter capacitance of a 21 year old subwoofer amp from the current two 10,000uf 75v caps to a pair of 20,000uf 75v caps. The current rectifier is a Fagor FB2502. Do you think this rectifier can handle the increase or should I upgrade it? Also, for reference, the amp uses a single power chip per side as opposed to discrete xistors if that matters. Thanks. Why? That's my question too: are you hearing hum through the subwoofer? (I highly doubt it.) Or do you want to increase the transient power handling capacity of the amp? Seems like you'd possibly be stressing some other part of the unit by beefing up the capacitators. -- The fashion in killing has an insouciant, flirty style this spring, with the flaunting of well-defined muscle, wrapped in flags. - Comment from an article on Antiwar.com (http://antiwar.com) |
#6
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"cjt" wrote in message
Spica wrote: I'd like to increase the filter capacitance of a 21 year old subwoofer amp from the current two 10,000uf 75v caps to a pair of 20,000uf 75v caps. The current rectifier is a Fagor FB2502. Do you think this rectifier can handle the increase or should I upgrade it? Also, for reference, the amp uses a single power chip per side as opposed to discrete xistors if that matters. Thanks. Why? Good question. Just about the only reasonable justification I can think of is that the existing caps have lost significant capacitance. This may or may not happen. I've seen electrolytics that were still well over 100% of nameplate capacitance after over 40 years, and others that were under 10% after 3 years. YMMV! 10,000 uF is actually quite a bit of overkill - a minimum number might be 2,500 uF - 3,300 uF. The real question is "what sounds bad"? I suspect that most "capacitor upgrades" satisfy psychological and social needs, not technical needs. |
#7
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On Mon, 12 Apr 2010 05:47:14 -0700, Arny Krueger wrote
(in article ) : "cjt" wrote in message Spica wrote: I'd like to increase the filter capacitance of a 21 year old subwoofer amp from the current two 10,000uf 75v caps to a pair of 20,000uf 75v caps. The current rectifier is a Fagor FB2502. Do you think this rectifier can handle the increase or should I upgrade it? Also, for reference, the amp uses a single power chip per side as opposed to discrete xistors if that matters. Thanks. Why? Good question. Just about the only reasonable justification I can think of is that the existing caps have lost significant capacitance. This may or may not happen. I've seen electrolytics that were still well over 100% of nameplate capacitance after over 40 years, and others that were under 10% after 3 years. YMMV! 10,000 uF is actually quite a bit of overkill - a minimum number might be 2,500 uF - 3,300 uF. The real question is "what sounds bad"? I suspect that most "capacitor upgrades" satisfy psychological and social needs, not technical needs. My experience is that MOST of the time, second-guessing a piece of equipment's designer(s) results in retrograde performance. SOMETIMES in some (admittedly rare) instances, so-called upgrades and tweaks are worthwhile, but not usually. I replaced some crossover caps in a speaker system with 'Wondercaps' of the same value once and speakers immediately sounded cleaner, more transparent. I replaced the LM301 op-amp in an old Crown IC150 preamp with a higher-slew rate pin-for-pin compatible J-Fet op-amp once and got measurably lower distortion (using a borrowed high-end distortion analyzer), but I couldn't actually HEAR any difference. It's a crap shoot. And honestly, the designer generally knows what he's doing and has chosen the values for his filter caps for a reason. It might be something as simple as the determination that a larger value adds only expense to the final product, without adding any measurable or discernible improvement in performance, or something more critical, like the values chosen matched the rectifier diodes and a significantly larger value will over stress them. It's best to leave things alone. If you have determined that the current caps are leaking, or have failed in some other way (resulting in hum), I suggest that you replace them with caps of the same value. Most likely "more" will not equate to "better". |
#8
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#11
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"Audio Empire" wrote in message
.com I replaced some crossover caps in a speaker system with 'Wondercaps' of the same value once and speakers immediately sounded cleaner, more transparent. better". What were the origional caps like? NP electrolytics or film caps? |
#12
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On Tue, 13 Apr 2010 05:03:53 -0700, Arny Krueger wrote
(in article ) : "Audio Empire" wrote in message .com I replaced some crossover caps in a speaker system with 'Wondercaps' of the same value once and speakers immediately sounded cleaner, more transparent. better". What were the origional caps like? NP electrolytics or film caps? They were those yellow Mylar caps. You know, the ones that aren't cylindrical, but look as if someone had stepped on one? The speakers were a set of Magnaplanar Tympani 3Cs. The ones with EIGHT panels: 2 tweeter panels, two midrange panels and four bass panels. At the time, they were Magnepan's top of the line speakers. |
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