Audio Project Amplifier Speaker Loudspeaker Kit
diyAudio.com diyAudio Forums Archive > Top > Amplifiers > Chip Amps
 
DC Blocking Capacitors - Click HERE for Original Thread
dome406
I built a Audisector gaiclone a while ago and am very pleased, however I have always been abit worried about plugging things in for the first time and about whether they output DC.

I know you can use capacitors to block DC but I am not sure which type to use, can you use any type availble? because I have some 1500uf and some 10uf electrolytic panasonic ones left (polarised) which I want to use or, would I have to buy a special type? e.g. non polarised or not electrolytic and if you can use polarised which way do you put them.

Also I know they may effect the sound.

Thanks Very Much,
wintermute
Hi Dome,

You could probably connect up two of the 10uF electros back to back (ie in series with either +ve to +ve or -ve to -ve). that will give you around 5uf. This is a bit bigger than I have seen generally used but shouldn't be a problem.

Ideally you should use something like a 2.2uF polypropylene cap. This is non-polarised, but has the disadvantage of being physically bigger and much more expensive :)

Tony.
dome406
Thanks for the fast reply, I will probably get some polpropylene. components keep getting harder to get and more expensive in the uk :( which is a shame.

Is there a difference between audio grade and normal?
wintermute
apart from price??? ;)

I've only used generic brand polypropylene crossover caps personally, so I can't comment on whether I think there is a difference, between audio grade and standard polyprops. I will say that I thought that they were an improvement over the bipolar electrolitics that they replaced though :)

Tony.
carlmart
quote:
Originally posted by dome406
Thanks for the fast reply, I will probably get some polpropylene. components keep getting harder to get and more expensive in the uk :( which is a shame.

Is there a difference between audio grade and normal?


As you probably know, in audio, when you get to a certain quality stage you also enter the law of diminishing returns for any new improvement.

There was an article in Audio Electronics some time ago where they tested several polypropylene caps, from cheap to very expensive, and differences (if any) seemed to be very, very small.

One thing that is important, though, is what type of wire are the terminals made of. If they are non-magnetic then I don't think there will be much of a difference between the caps.


Carlos
Peter Daniel
quote:
Originally posted by carlmart
There was an article in Audio Electronics some time ago where they tested several polypropylene caps, from cheap to very expensive, and differences (if any) seemed to be very, very small.

One thing that is important, though, is what type of wire are the terminals made of. If they are non-magnetic then I don't think there will be much of a difference between the caps.

Depending on your system, the difference can be also very big.

If you have Panasonic FC 10u left, use those for coupling. Don't use them back to back, just a single cap. If you'll pleased with the sound, leave it like that.

Otherwise, I would suggest BG N 4.7u, which IMO are better for coupling than most pricey exotic brands. They are also cheap, at $3.25/pc.
Dominique
Why not use polyester (mylar) caps? They're also non-polar as the polypropylene, cheaper and quality wise, they (theoretically) should be between polypropylene and aluminium electrolytics.

In case you really decide for polypropylene, the cheapest I've seen are here: www.reichelt.de, search for "vis folie"
they seem to be come from Visaton (though I don't know if they just buy them from someone else)

Cheers,
Dominique
wintermute
polyester is a good low cost option, I'd say definitely better than cheap electros, though Peter feels that the BP black gates are better than even the polys, and at the price I'd say they are a bargain... (if unlike me you can source them locally).

I just realised that my input caps I repaced with polyproylene weren't electros, they were polyester green caps, and I did notice an improvement. don't think it was psycoacoustic but you never know ;)

Tony.
dome406
Thanks for the help, I am going to try them panasonic caps today (as it is half term) and test out a volume control out of spare parts from an old stereo before i buy some new parts.

Page generated in 0.031764030456543 seconds with 17 queries,
spending 0.00816274 doing MySQL queries and 0.02360129 doing PHP things.

Powered by: Search Engine Indexer and vBulletin
Copyright ©1999-2008 diyAudio.com