Folks
I have a Dynaco ST 70 clone from Welborne Labs, the model V.35, and would like to replace the electrolytic capacitors in the power supply board.
The original unit came with Panasonic 330mfd, 450V caps, and these appear to be quite expensive. I have located affordable snap in electrolytic caps at apexjr, of similar rating and welcome any advice from any of you knowledgeable people out there
Link:http://www.apexjr.com/capacitorsR.html
Thanks
George
Bangalore, India
I have a Dynaco ST 70 clone from Welborne Labs, the model V.35, and would like to replace the electrolytic capacitors in the power supply board.
The original unit came with Panasonic 330mfd, 450V caps, and these appear to be quite expensive. I have located affordable snap in electrolytic caps at apexjr, of similar rating and welcome any advice from any of you knowledgeable people out there
Link:http://www.apexjr.com/capacitorsR.html
Thanks
George
Bangalore, India
Hi George,
Make sure you are not buying NOS. You want brand new stock, fresh. Given how long you will own this amp, good caps are not that expensive.
-Chris
Make sure you are not buying NOS. You want brand new stock, fresh. Given how long you will own this amp, good caps are not that expensive.
-Chris
$6.17 (5.22 qty 10) is expensive? That's the price at DigiKey.com.
What's wrong with the caps that are in there? Surplus caps may not be any newer.... If you want some, I have 330@400V pulls - you can have'em for postage.
What's wrong with the caps that are in there? Surplus caps may not be any newer.... If you want some, I have 330@400V pulls - you can have'em for postage.
Thanks Chris, I'll check.
Tom:
I saw the price on the Welborne Labs site at $14 a pop, and figured that $84 for six caps was a bit higher than I could afford. The Digiikey option opens up possibilities..
I am looking at replacing them is because when I power off the amp, one channel doesnt retain the audio for more than a second or so, whereas the other channel continues for about 8-10 seconds, leading me to think that there is a problem. Could there be any way for me to check whether the caps need to be replaced, or if the problem lies elsewhere?
Thanks
George
Tom:
I saw the price on the Welborne Labs site at $14 a pop, and figured that $84 for six caps was a bit higher than I could afford. The Digiikey option opens up possibilities..
I am looking at replacing them is because when I power off the amp, one channel doesnt retain the audio for more than a second or so, whereas the other channel continues for about 8-10 seconds, leading me to think that there is a problem. Could there be any way for me to check whether the caps need to be replaced, or if the problem lies elsewhere?
Thanks
George
Hi George,
This could be caused by low bias current, or turn off transients. I normally look at the waveforms across the caps with a 'scope. If I see big "pips" on the leading edge, the cap may be defective. I measure them to be sure in an unfamiliar amp.
-Chris
This could be caused by low bias current, or turn off transients. I normally look at the waveforms across the caps with a 'scope. If I see big "pips" on the leading edge, the cap may be defective. I measure them to be sure in an unfamiliar amp.
-Chris
Illinois Capacitor, Nichon and Xicon are about the lowest priced and I have had no problem with them in PSU.
Xicon's make great cathode bypass too for their price, though Panasonics do sound better there.
Xicon's make great cathode bypass too for their price, though Panasonics do sound better there.
Old computer switchmode power supplies are a good source of HV electro's. Some are sonically good brands. Most (check for expansion) are undamaged and useable within their marked tolerances.
Hi,
I bypass with electrolytic and couple with MKP.
I have tried all sorts of caps in cathodes for bypass. Tantalums are interesting, but not so interesting to warrant $4 over $0.40 😉
jmartins said:Geek
Do you use electrolytic to bypass? try Silver Mica or MKP
I bypass with electrolytic and couple with MKP.
I have tried all sorts of caps in cathodes for bypass. Tantalums are interesting, but not so interesting to warrant $4 over $0.40 😉
Nordic said:Most of the cheap stuff I can get is Jamicon and Hitano, are those any good?
Have stumbled across Rubycons in a ps. These usually sound problem free.
suppliers
MCM Electronics is one general electronics supplier you might check. For audiophile grade stuff Parts Connexion is good, but not cheap usually.
MCM Electronics is one general electronics supplier you might check. For audiophile grade stuff Parts Connexion is good, but not cheap usually.
I have used a number of Hitano high voltage caps without problems. But check for the PSU input capacitor maximum ripple current if there are specs., otherwise buy large ones. (Blast! I had a complete catalogue here and could look up the type but the darn thing has wandered off.)
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