The typical symptom for dried up old electrolytic caps is weak LF response.SEED78 said:My SP1200's individual outs are hissy half the time - anyone know what caps are a perfect replacement so I can do a recap?
.....where the (balanced) line-output XLR was connected to the (padded) mic-input XLR with the phantom power switched on ? Yes, I have seen that too.....Khron said:... I HAVE seen bloated capacitors even on some line-level outputs....
JohnRoberts said:I don't know what it is either but they may be using the sample and hold circuits to multiplex a more continuous audio output signal from very narrow digital samples. Like one relatively expensive DCA generating 8 audio outputs.
Polystyrene is an excellent dielectric for sample and hold circuits because of low dielectric absorption (aka soakage or memory effect). A bad hold cap could introduce noise at the sample/refresh frequency.
If you can't source a polystyrene capacitor a NPO/COG ceramic is probably OK. I doubt it needs to be 160V but that was a typical voltage for polystyrenes.
JR
If price is no object, teflon is an excellent dielectric for DA. Polystyrene was sweet because it was both cheap and very good, sadly not robust enough to stand up to modern manufacturing processes.user 37518 said:Another good, albeit expensive cap dielectric is polyphenylene sulfide.
For today's too much information, I used thousands of polystyrene caps back in my kit business (Phoenix Systems) days, with ham fisted novice customers, hand soldering these to assemble kits with no significant issues.living sounds said:Yes, the polystyrene caps in the SPs are a know problem. You can still buy polystyrene caps, just be careful soldering them, use as little heat as quickly as possible.
living sounds said:Yes, the polystyrene caps in the SPs are a know problem. You can still buy polystyrene caps, just be careful soldering them, use as little heat as quickly as possible.
user 37518 said:They are only to be found in very limited set of values and high price, they are scheduled for obsolescence if you ask me...
I don't know why, but I doubt that they will sound "softer" in a sample & hold circuit...living sounds said:.... WIMA bills the FKP-2 (polypropylene) as a replacement for polystyrene caps.... it may sound a little different......
analogguru said:I don't know why, but I doubt that they will sound "softer" in a sample & hold circuit...
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