The Documentary Sound Guy
Active member
My project is about as simple as could be: I'm repairing a crossover in speaker with no high frequency response. The crossover is two caps and a transformer on a PCB. One of the capacitors has failed open, and I'm going to replace it.
What I'm wondering is how strictly I need to match the capacitor, both in terms of electrical specs, and also in terms of chemistry and brand.
Here's a photo:
The dead cap is the one that is lifted with the specs visible. On that basis, this is what I can tell from the original:
What I'm wondering is how strictly I need to match the capacitor, both in terms of electrical specs, and also in terms of chemistry and brand.
Here's a photo:
The dead cap is the one that is lifted with the specs visible. On that basis, this is what I can tell from the original:
- 330µF
- 85°C
- 100V
- NP?
- Electrolytic???
- Nihtin ??? Brand?
- 330µF (exact value)
- ≥ 85°C (at least)
- ≥ 100V (at least)
- NP? (not relevant?)
- Electrolytic??? (replace with electrolytic)
- Nihtin ??? Brand? (brand not relevant)