calaverasgrande
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jan 15, 2015
- Messages
- 91
I'm refurbishing an old synth. Just noticed I'm getting DC voltage on the output.
Apparently the output cap is not really a cap anymore.
So before I order the exact same part which was specced 40 years ago, is there a better part?
I know this is an asinine question to ask a priori.
However I'm just curious if materials science has progressed, or standard practice has changed since the late 70's.
Right now its a 220uf 16v lytic. Not specified as anything special in the service manual. Tolerance is +50/-10.
Curious if a film cap might be better?
BTW I've searched for info on this for days, but seem to have had a hard time coming up with search terms that don't run me aground of audiophile gibberish on one side or unrelated stuff about microphones. Seems odd, lots of things use DC blocking output caps?
Apparently the output cap is not really a cap anymore.
So before I order the exact same part which was specced 40 years ago, is there a better part?
I know this is an asinine question to ask a priori.
However I'm just curious if materials science has progressed, or standard practice has changed since the late 70's.
Right now its a 220uf 16v lytic. Not specified as anything special in the service manual. Tolerance is +50/-10.
Curious if a film cap might be better?
BTW I've searched for info on this for days, but seem to have had a hard time coming up with search terms that don't run me aground of audiophile gibberish on one side or unrelated stuff about microphones. Seems odd, lots of things use DC blocking output caps?