Like Stan said,large caps aren't a guarantee of a better amp.A company may have a smaller power transformer,with bigger caps,and give good short time needed power.An amp with a big power transformer,and smaller caps,can give you that same power on a continuous basis.If a lot of power is needed,that one may have better overall power.With that said,it's still the overall design of everything that make an amp sound good.Not just big caps.Those booming car stereos use extra big caps to store up power,to give those short big booms.In between each big boom,the caps charge up quickly,for the next big boom.Definitely,not high end.Overall good design is whats important.I hope this gives you an idea of what big caps alone do.
What's more important, watts or capacitance?
I'm confused about what makes an amp able to reproduce musical transients realistically. Some articles I've read state that one needs lots of power, measured in watts, to handle dynamics, especially when pushing moderately sensitive speakers. Other articles refer to capacitance as the key. Currently, I use an amp with 600W / 900W into 8/4 ohms, and if I read the specs correctly, it has 60,000 microfarrads of capacitance. An alternative I'm considering puts out 'only' about 220W / 400W but claims capacitance of 200,000 microfarrads. So which amp will sound more dynamic? FWIW, my speakers have a sensitivity of 87.5 db, avg. impedence of 4 ohms and a minimum impedence of 3 ohms. I don't listen at real high volumes, but I do like classical music at close to live levels.
Thanks for any insight!
Thanks for any insight!
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- 9 posts total
- 9 posts total