Hi there,
This really depends. With a value this high I have to assume it's a low pass filter. If so it is likely to go to ground. If so these rarely matter as much as caps in series. They DO matter, but it's hard to really judge their sonic worth as much. To hear the difference here you might want to try a non-polarized electrolytic before you spend too much money. Here's one that costs $2.
https://www.parts-express.com/100uF-100V-Non-Polarized-Capacitor-027-360
Try it and see if you feel it's an important capacitor in your circuit.
The uF determines the frequency of the crossover filter (gross oversimplification) the VDC determines the maximum voltage. If you apply too much it will short the capacitor and it will no longer work as expected. That's a very high value for a speaker where I can't imagine ever needing more than 200 VDC rating in extreme high power speakers but with film caps it's hard to make a lower voltage cap sometimes, do don't go looking to optimize this.
Best,
Erik
This really depends. With a value this high I have to assume it's a low pass filter. If so it is likely to go to ground. If so these rarely matter as much as caps in series. They DO matter, but it's hard to really judge their sonic worth as much. To hear the difference here you might want to try a non-polarized electrolytic before you spend too much money. Here's one that costs $2.
https://www.parts-express.com/100uF-100V-Non-Polarized-Capacitor-027-360
Try it and see if you feel it's an important capacitor in your circuit.
What value is important the uf or the vdc
The uF determines the frequency of the crossover filter (gross oversimplification) the VDC determines the maximum voltage. If you apply too much it will short the capacitor and it will no longer work as expected. That's a very high value for a speaker where I can't imagine ever needing more than 200 VDC rating in extreme high power speakers but with film caps it's hard to make a lower voltage cap sometimes, do don't go looking to optimize this.
Best,
Erik