Mods on Bryston 10B Crossover

I just acquired a Bryston 10b after a long search for an electronic XO. I wanted analog, high quality and discrete components. And there aren't a ton of choices.

Once receiving it. I downloaded the schematic and popped the cover. Right away I notice that there are 8 100uf electrolytics directly in line right at the outputs. There are also some small ceramics in the signal path right before the high pass resistor array ( I presume the switch shown in the top right is the 6/12/18dB selector labeled N1/2/3)

It is the standard model, not the Sub. it is the balanced version.

I'd like to upgrade whatever components I can to increase performance. Aside from the components I noted, I'd also be grateful for other suggestions.

Part of the challenge is this unit is only about 2" high, and those electrolytics are on top of a board so there's limited room. One option I considered was to move the PS board to an external box, which would open up room.

Any and all suggestions would be greatly appreciated!
 

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I wouldn't worry about the 100 uF electrolytics: their impedance at audio frequencies into power amplifier inputs is negligible so any nonlinearity would get lost in the noise.

Which small ceramics concern you? If it's the 220 pf / 47 pf /10 pf jobbies in various feedback loops then they're most likely NP0 or C0G, which are stable and non-distorting. I use that type myself in preamp inputs to keep RF gunge out (and Lordy do I have a story about that).
 
I don't doubt that the unit was built with perfectly adequate components. And a number of the components would not be impacted by any sort of "better" option. And while I'm no electronic engineer, having seen many schematics and looked at lots of equipment, I know manufacturers of higher-end equipment try very hard to keep any sort of capacitor from the signal path and when it's necessary, they use upper end film caps. I have swapped caps many times in lots of different equipment and have experienced the benefits.

I know next to nothing about active crossover design aside from basic function. And the circuit layout looks very similar to other low-level signal devices. So that brings me to;
-I have no idea from a design perspective why those caps are there.
-I know from experience and looking at the practice of others that caps in the signal path are worthy of avoidance.
-You don't see much in the way in upper end designs of electrolytics in any signal path.
-Film caps in my experience always sound better than electrolytics.

What I'm attempting is to expand my knowledge base and understand the why's. I could just move some things around and stick film caps in there. But then I would learn nothing.

Thanks for whatever you can share.