Several months back I purchased a set of Sozo Vintage Mustard capacitors for my Germino Classic 45 (JTM-45 clone). They sound GREAT.
However, I noticed that ever since they were installed, the amp periodically thins way out....major loss of low end and some overall volume....and this is only remedied by turning the amp to standby and then back on again. I have tried the following: different channels on the amp, different eq and volume settings, installed known good tubes, tried different guitars, different cables, different electric outlets, and even a different building entirely. Nothing has eliminated the problem. Granted, it is relatively infrequent (maybe happens once every few times I play the amp), but it never happened before the caps were installed. I sent the whole amplifier into Greg Germino and he tested the caps and went through the entire amp, and found nothing amiss. The caps tested out fine and the whole amp was gone over, and he play-tested the amp extensively with no issue. He said he'd experienced such a thing before when he first started using Sozo caps, and found that when he installed the supposedly problematic caps in another amp, it ran fine with no issues...and he was baffled as to what the cause might have been.
Is this part of the natural break-in of these type of handmade caps? I've used the standard Sozo caps and never experienced any problems, so I'm unsure. As well, the caps are the only constant in this equation, so I'm fairly certain the issue lies with them. Before I go order new caps and begin a lengthy process of elimination, I was wondering if you all had any ideas as to what the problem might be?
However, I noticed that ever since they were installed, the amp periodically thins way out....major loss of low end and some overall volume....and this is only remedied by turning the amp to standby and then back on again. I have tried the following: different channels on the amp, different eq and volume settings, installed known good tubes, tried different guitars, different cables, different electric outlets, and even a different building entirely. Nothing has eliminated the problem. Granted, it is relatively infrequent (maybe happens once every few times I play the amp), but it never happened before the caps were installed. I sent the whole amplifier into Greg Germino and he tested the caps and went through the entire amp, and found nothing amiss. The caps tested out fine and the whole amp was gone over, and he play-tested the amp extensively with no issue. He said he'd experienced such a thing before when he first started using Sozo caps, and found that when he installed the supposedly problematic caps in another amp, it ran fine with no issues...and he was baffled as to what the cause might have been.
Is this part of the natural break-in of these type of handmade caps? I've used the standard Sozo caps and never experienced any problems, so I'm unsure. As well, the caps are the only constant in this equation, so I'm fairly certain the issue lies with them. Before I go order new caps and begin a lengthy process of elimination, I was wondering if you all had any ideas as to what the problem might be?
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