Question About Capacitor Upgrade in Tube Amp


Hi,

I am preparing to do a coupling capacitor upgrade on a recently purchased tube integrated amp. The two 0.22uF on the preamp tubes are fairly straight forward. But I noticed another similar model 0.33uF cap on the large filter capacitor for the B+ supply that is installed across the hot lead to ground.

Does this cap on the B+ just block high frequency noise from the power supply or does it have any effect on the amp tone? Is there any reason to "upgrade" this cap?

I know it may be hard to tell exactly what is going on without a schematic.

Also any recommendations on a good cap to use in the upgrade of the coupling caps? I was looking at Mundorf SilverGoldOil for the quality at not too crazy a price. The amp already sounds good but lacks a little clarity that I think a coupling cap swap will help with. It is SET 300B amp.

Thank you!

 

calieng

@ieales

Agreed that those properties have not been mentioned. But which of them do you consider more important than DA? You seem to have left that thought unfinished.

You say, "OH, yes they should." But my reading of the OP is that the question concerns coupling and bypass caps. Are you seriously suggesting bypassing with electrolytics?

Of course modern electrolytics are better, but that is not the question as I read it.

 

"On SET amps the key here is not just Caps, resistors and etc but the trannies are the keys elements which will make the amps sound best. "

Not on SET amps - on all music reproducing or generating equipment. Thats like saying "The key on binoculars is having a good lens!", as if cameras, microscopes, etc don’t need that either.

The second most important thing to keep in mind is don’t let anyone say to you, "I doubt this change will matter because of X Y Z position or capacitance etc". They dont know what you have to begin with, and the part may be so cheap it causes a lot of damage to the audio because of its physical nature. Replacing it with audio-grade may make a world of difference, no matter where in the circuit it is. A Leica lens may have 20 glass elements which serve a different purpose in the schematic, but if glass #14 or #4 is made out of ikea plastic, replacing it will naturally cause a huge improvement.

Recently I had my eyeglass lens replaced with a very high grade material for 2x the cost, and while the Rx was still slightly off, the overall experience of contrast, detail, color, distortion, was far superior. The optometrist thinks only in terms of his narrow view of measurements, getting the focus to land correctly, which is important. But won't usually talk to about the myriad of esoteric enhancements a better material brings, even with the wrong Rx. Audio in electronics is similar, hence why many systems dont measure well or are accurate, but present special qualities of music.

 

But my reading of the OP is that the question concerns coupling and bypass caps. Are you seriously suggesting bypassing with electrolytics?

BEFORE worrying about bypass or blocking caps, ALWAYS ensure the electrolytic PSU filter caps are up to snuff. Way too many tube amps have inadequate primary filter capacitance. Dropping the 120Hz by 10dB is far preferable to 100kHz by a couple.

Too often they are under voltage, too high ESR, too small, etc.

A simple answer. Yes, the small cap across the large el4ctrolytic cap reduces high frequency noise.