coupling caps for phono prepre

My favourite cartridge has a carbon fibre former, so nothing to magnetise. (sorry Jan, drifting this off topic).


On topic, I note there is phono 1 and phono 2. Are they two preamps or do you switch the cartridge input?

Yes there are two physical input connectors for two turntables.

Jan
 

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i wonder if this type of caps are the perfect cap for this application.these are the ones used as battery for memory dumps.220 000uf/5.5vdc although i have a feeling that the writing on themmight be wrong and the actual value is 22 000uf.still very high.I can't measure it anyway.

It's probably correct, 0.22 F is perfectly normal for a supercapacitor. In fact you can buy 600 F, 2.7 V units as well, banks of those are often used for regenerative breaking of electric vehicles.

0.22 F would require some patience, as the voltage across the capacitor would take minutes to settle.
 
i wonder if this type of caps are the perfect cap for this application.these are the ones used as battery for memory dumps.220 000uf/5.5vdc although i have a feeling that the writing on themmight be wrong and the actual value is 22 000uf.still very high.I can't measure it anyway.


Probably the wrong choice, far more capacitance than is needed and _very_ poor dielectric absorption performance, causing continual drift in voltage for minutes/hours? They may even be microphonic given the charge storage density is very high so that only a small deformation necessarily has influence on a lot of charge. Given the technology is based on activated carbon particles the electrical noise may be another issue.
 
At 0 DC bias and 0 signal you can only get thermal noise of the ESR, so look up the ESR over the frequency range of interest and you know the noise. Of course these capacitors are working at a DC bias of about 10 mV rather than 0, so I can't be sure my line of reasoning still holds.
 
At 0 DC bias and 0 signal you can only get thermal noise of the ESR, so look up the ESR over the frequency range of interest and you know the noise. Of course these capacitors are working at a DC bias of about 10 mV rather than 0, so I can't be sure my line of reasoning still holds.

Apparently 4 years ago, I tried to estimate how bad the noise with a substantial DC bias could get: https://www.diyaudio.com/forums/parts/56015-tantalum-capacitors-signal-path-3.html#post4933526
 
That's very interesting! So some aluminium-polymer capacitors have a large and time-variant leakage that causes the excess low-frequency noise in the thread you linked to. It might be less of an issue for Jan with his DC bias of only about 10 mV, but you can better be safe than sorry and use normal aluminium electrolytics.