Expectations after re cap of power-amp


My 1982 Yamaha M-2 power amp is in the shop and this time I agreed to replace all the suspect capacitors. Two of the capacitors are the size of coffee cans and the total bill may exceed $500. I am told that since all the replacement parts will be as good as or better than the original parts it should sound as good as new or better.

I’ve never done this before.  Should I expect “as good as new” or am I completely wasting my money?


timothywright
The responses have all been very encouraging, thank you so very much.  My worst fear would be that the amp would sound worse not better and I might waste the money invested and butcher what was once a well respected amplifier.

 

I don’t want to throw good money away but after the responses I received I don’t think that would be the case.

 I was shopping some expensive (and powerful) power amps and everything I looked at was $5k - $7k. So if I can get my old Yamaha back to ship shape for anything like $500 I am all in.


@timothywright  If you like the amp that price to repair is reasonable. And a lot better than what can happen if a filter capacitor eats a power transformer or explodes! You'll hear the improvement right away- anything built that long ago has ailing capacitors!
If your caps were compromised; it should sound better, soon as you get it back.      Chances are good; it will sound(increasingly) better, as the new electrolytics, "form", their oxide layer. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electrolytic_capacitor
My worst fear would be that the amp would sound worse not better and I might waste the money invested and butcher what was once a well respected amplifier.


Done well, the worst thing you should expect is 30 years of trouble free use.
it will sound much better...but don't expect it to sound nearly as good as the Classe amps you really want...but definitely worth the cost to recap...