Audio Research Reference 250 capacitor issue


One of my reference 250amp fuse blown and found that the capacitor is bad and audio research has upgrade kit to replace Teflon capacitors with latest ones. The also have new wiring in the upgrade kit. Has anyone experienced this ? I see they discontinued Teflon capacitors a year or two back.
veerapaneni
this mix of white and gold cap got me thinking ...

You were offered the whole kit - which consists of all the caps, for what reason?

Because ARC feels its an 'upgrade' (i.e, better parts, better sound)?

Or because ARC doesn't have the old white cap in stock any longer, and because you cannot have a mix of them in your amp, therefore you had to buy the whole kit and replace all the caps? But then, one of you mentioned that your Ref 250 contains a mix of white and gold foil Teflon caps. So what's the deal then?

If you have one of the more recently manufactured amp with the gold foil Teflon cap, and one cap goes back, does it mean that you only need to buy/pay one cap as replacement?

I am going to call Kalvin at ARC and ask him these questions tomorrow.
Been passing messages with Kal. I asked some follow up Qs that pose the same Qs as posed above. I'll report back.

Btw, Kal mentioned that the G Series should hit the stores soon. He sent me a spec sheet on G Serie gear. The G-150 has almost identical specs to the Ref 150, e.g., wpc, power supply, etc. The wpc spec was a little higher than the Ref 150, but I attribute that to the KT-150 tube.

Kal said the KT-150 are still not approved for the current Ref line. I think this is about marketing.
My understanding from digging was that the white caps were great but that there were problems with some of those caps early on in production. Not to worry, ARC tests the caps to make sure they are free from defects before install and the defective ones were returned to the manufacturer. I was also told that if the caps passed the initial testing and were installed, they were good for as long as any other caps.
ARC was hoping for the longest time that the manufacturer could continue and/or increase production--indeed, ARC's wait for these caps was the main reason for the long delays in upgrading the Ref 5 and the Ref Phono 2 to SE which included an upgrade of the caps.
In the end, the manufacturer either could not come through with enough product in time, ceased production or went under so ARC looked elsewhere for caps. Hence the gold caps. If you have white caps, rest easy
I think you will find that the "New" coupling capacitors are in fact an Film n Foil job as a-posed to the previously employed teflon's.

If you look carefully under the hood on older production units you will also notice that ARC utilised a smaller Teflon bypass capacitor in parallel with the main coupling capacitors, the later units sporting the Gold FnF no longer require this bypass cap as presumably these are wider bandwidth capable.

Personally, I would not be best pleased were ARC to Ship my unit back, post service, sporting a mix of older Teflon's and FnF's.
I think the old Teflon capacitors are not able to handle high voltages and arc replaced them with new gold color capacitors. They are continuing using Teflon capacitors in preamps but discontinued in amplifiers. I have 30 hrs on my capacitors and they sound pretty good. Don't hear any difference. After 100hrs of breakin they should sound better.