I'm in the midst of plans to build my first amp - a small, single-ended Class A amp similar to the GA-5 or Valve Junior (among others). I expect that I'll be modding, tweaking, and then modding the amp again, but that's a different issue, as is the question of whether the amp is an end in itself or a stepping stone to something like an 18watt. Right now my focus is on the power supply.
I've been researching power supplies for guitar amps and high-end audio, and I keep running across something that confuses me: a small poly cap, typically 100nF to 1uF, in parallel with a larger electrolytic cap, e.g. C11||C8 in the Valve Junior.
I've read of people actually replacing *all* the electrolytic caps with polypropylene caps in an effort to build an amplifier that will last until the End of Days, and that the poly caps tend to have lower resistance and inductance than electrolytics; essentially, they're less-imperfect than electros. Is this cap supposed to make that filter stage behave more like the electro/poly combo is actually a larger poly? And if this is the case, why not use similar poly caps in parallel with the other electrolytics in the power supply?
Peter
I've been researching power supplies for guitar amps and high-end audio, and I keep running across something that confuses me: a small poly cap, typically 100nF to 1uF, in parallel with a larger electrolytic cap, e.g. C11||C8 in the Valve Junior.
I've read of people actually replacing *all* the electrolytic caps with polypropylene caps in an effort to build an amplifier that will last until the End of Days, and that the poly caps tend to have lower resistance and inductance than electrolytics; essentially, they're less-imperfect than electros. Is this cap supposed to make that filter stage behave more like the electro/poly combo is actually a larger poly? And if this is the case, why not use similar poly caps in parallel with the other electrolytics in the power supply?
Peter
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