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Filter cap value question (in a Dynaco SCA-35 hi-f amp)i

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  • #16
    The power supply caps are in the current path return to common for the amplifier so a stiff power supply has good a low impedance to ground. So how much is enough? Depends on your desired low frequency response and transit response. That is not as simple a question as it sounds, tastes in music change with the state of the society. When I was growing up, there was no such thing a deep bass in recorded music, we did not expect it and did not hear it but we always knew exactly where the kick and bass were driving. We heard the second and higher order harmonics from our 6X9 oval car speakers and portable 45 record players so our brains filled in the sensation of the missing fundamental. Having a limited spectrum to deal with with records, AM radio, hi-fi systems, did not diminish the impact of those classic songs that still sound great today even after being remixed and bottom enhanced artificially. So consider the time in which the Dynakits were available. Amplifying anything that was not in the source material was a bad thing, because it was only noise, so limiting low frequency response, while not a goal usually, no one was concerned that the amps where not flat from DC to Daylight.
    For modern recordings which have a lot of signal energy that is outside the range of fundamental notes of the instruments playing, extended response in amps and speakers, at orders of magnitude more power needed to reproduce subsonics, are all part of what is in vogue now. You will have to beef up the supply, for that, and many other changes to handle the deep subsonics convincingly. Lowering the power supply impedance at 20-30 hz will mean a lot more capacitance. It also means pretty high inrush currents to tame to prevent diodes, transformers and primary fuses from self-destructing.

    Concerts that want 136db levels in 1960 did it with 100 watts, but nothing was expected through the speakers below about 70 hz. The cost of such a system was a couple thousands dollars when gear was more expensive per level of performance than today when power and low distortion are dirt cheap. Even with the tremendous drop in price of gear, 136db flat down to where people house mixers what to emphasis , 20-30hz is 100-500 times more investment to get that 1.5 octave lower. Even guitar players are seeking more bottom which which presents problems with speakers(some are even open baffle cabinets..and expect LF) and amplifiers to be pretty in distortion from the fundamental notes and all their harmonics and up, when mixing them with subsonics. There are a lot of reasons it is hard to get good tone now, when it was actually easier when a guitar rig only needed to be effective from 100 hz and up.
    Did anyone NOT get the beat down pat on first hearing of all those great RB records, or Motown, or Stax, Muscle Shoals recordings? The instruments did not share the same sonic space or spectrum and each stood out. Now, when going to a gig in a club, it seems as if each instrument is trying to suck all the spectrum out of the room. When bass rigs, lead guitar and keyboards are running enough bottom emphasis to overtake the kick drum, something is really screwed up the tone sculpting and arrangements. It also makes vocals unintelligible. Excessive volume is the crutch used by less confident players, those who fear or know they have nothing to say.
    So the answer to your question is, as usual, Depends. If you want to reproduce modern digital recordings, you are going to need really stiff low z power supplies at the lowest frequency of concern. But it is a waste if your speakers are not really effective at those frequencies. That presents the worst situation, feeding a signal with high levels of subsonics, into an amp that is needing 90% of its power to reproduce signal frequencies that the speakers can reproduce anyway....the result is both the amp and speaker are being bombarded with energy that is modulating all the reproducible frequencies and making them suck. Full range systems don't make any sense. Use your little SCA-35 for a range of frequencies it is good at, with speakers that are good over the same range and remove all the subsonics from the signal path and route that to the 1000 watt amp and gigantic speakers needed to reproduce the subsonic portion at the same level of perceived level. Or, just listen to old recordings. Or wait around another 20years and a new fade in sound will be all the rage.

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    • #17
      Well back in the good old days (before I was born ) the bass lines were deliberately distorted to add more harmonics, so you could make them out on those portable radios and so on. I think Phil Spector even had two bassists playing the same line in fifths as part of his "wall of sound" concept.

      And even then, the electric bass guitar doesn't have much fundamental energy, compared to a bass synthesizer. The output is mostly harmonics, and classic bass amps played along with that. The speakers didn't have full output down at low E (42Hz) and the tube amp distorted a bit and emphasized the harmonics even more.

      That is the recipe for the classic Motown and rock bass sound, and reasonably sized affordable bass rigs still go by it out of necessity. (I was rather fond of my giant 2x15" cab though )

      Nowadays, what is somewhat annoying is digital recordings with subsonics that make your woofers flap uselessly (inaudibly) in and out. They're usually electronic dance type music. The producer obviously used a low-shelf EQ to boost the bass, forgetting that it boosts everything down to DC. It is a sheer waste of power, especially if you're listening on a tube amp.

      On the bright side, a classic Dynaco style amp could make your Ipod sound almost bearable

      And if you're listening to digital recordings, you can just shove them through a digital EQ like the excellent Behringer one and set it to filter out the subsonic crap.
      "Enzo, I see that you replied parasitic oscillations. Is that a hypothesis? Or is that your amazing metal band I should check out?"

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      • #18
        They were not deliberately distorted, the results were due to every step of the way from board through tape to disc cutter, the medium, playback, thin paper cone speakers driven by 2 watt amps, or a single ended 6AQ5, 6V6 or loctal tube in a car radio with 12 volts on the plates, or AM broadcast FCC limitations etc. All the old classic sounded better than the Spector wall of crud sound. No one liked the sound even than but they liked some of the songs he produced.
        Even after that time when independent studios sprang up with more interest in sound quality, we used to spend many hours sitting in cars in the parking lot listening to basics, roughs or mixes on radios or cassette decks. It was pretty standard to have a small AM and a FM transmitter in the studio to hear how kids where going to hear it out in the lot. FM required a bit straighter mixes but even the album rock stations had a lot of compression in the chain that messed us..
        Yeah, subsonics in pa systems and recording chains is pure amateur, it ruins the repro for most people, and costs more for tickets in concerts due to having to have such monster systems even for mid level bands. It also has closed off most venues to live concerts due to structural damage. When Paul McCartney played here last in Palace Square, a million in damage was done to the Hermitage from sound. The building survived 900 days of shelling in WWII by the Axis but not a rock/pop concert several hundred meters away. The Stones were kept at much lower levels and everyone there who had seen other Stones concerts said it was the best sounding one they experienced. Mick actually sounded pretty good, which was the biggest shock. If the Stones can rock a crowd at only 134 db why a pop act needs 146 at <30hz?

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        • #19
          Steve - how hot does your PT get? I know these run hot but I am talking like 145-150 degrees. New quad of JJ's are not red plating but maybe I should put another 10-20 ohms on the bias resistors to get this running a bit cooler?? They are now 190 ohm. I definitely will tell my buddy to keep it elevated on a hard surface and nothing above it.

          Did adding the choke remove much hum? I have a weak 7199 (damn!) and may have to convert it or buy converters 6gh8s. Those 7199s are like gold $$.

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          • #20
            Originally posted by km6xz View Post
            They were not deliberately distorted
            So, just a happy accident since it worked out for the sound.
            "Take two placebos, works twice as well." Enzo

            "Now get off my lawn with your silicooties and boom-chucka speakers and computers masquerading as amplifiers" Justin Thomas

            "If you're not interested in opinions and the experience of others, why even start a thread?
            You can't just expect consent." Helmholtz

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            • #21
              The PTs in my amp run too hot to touch after a few hours. That is the downside of big filter caps, they push up the RMS current in the transformer windings for a given DC output.

              I had 200uF before the filter chokes and 200 after, but I moved one of the capacitor sections to see if it might cool things down any.
              "Enzo, I see that you replied parasitic oscillations. Is that a hypothesis? Or is that your amazing metal band I should check out?"

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              • #22
                Actually it was not an accident, it was just the reality of the defective technology of the day and it trained a whole generation of what sounds good because that sound was associated with songs they liked. Sound preferences are learned and they become the definition of what later sounds are measured against. Sort of like how any lover is judged by the reference of what you learned with. Objectively the "classics" of rock and roll were not good, drove parents crazy but for kids it became the definition of proper sound. The kids grew up seeking the same goal.
                The distortion that some active elements induce happens to fit natural perception of sounds in the real world where even harmonics are dominate, but it still distortion.

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                • #23
                  I really learned a lot from this thread! My old PA (built 30 years ago), has 18's capable of 35hz, but we also kept the 40hz rumble filter on the mixer activated. I know I'm an old fart, and I like the sound of my EV's, but wasn't sure why I was so annoyed by the DJ's systems that the kids use today. Didn't realise there was so much low freq emphasis. (No wonder I can't tell what the guy is saying!)

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                  • #24
                    Originally posted by Wrongdog View Post
                    Cool glad to hear this is worthwhile! Is there a favorite tone circuit bypass method you would advise?
                    I should have responded sooner, but with the SCA-35, the easiest approach is simply to eliminate the tone controls completely, going straight from the volume control to the 7199s. You can also drop the 7199 input impedance to a more reasonable level by reducing the value of the grid-leak resistor. In stock form, I think it's something like 4.7Meg as a way of preventing additional signal loss after the lossy tone controls. (The SCA-35 has no real line stage, which is where tone controls generally operate.) You can drop the 7199 grid resistor to 470k or lower.

                    If you're going to build one of these from scratch, I'd build an integrated amp version of the Dynaco ST-35. The ST-35 uses the same transformers, but has an all-triode driver stage instead of the 7199. Most people think that the ST-35 circuit sounds better, and it frees you from having to find a decent 7199. We are scraping the bottom of the barrel these days in terms of NOS 7199s.

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                    • #25
                      Originally posted by km6xz View Post
                      Actually it was not an accident, it was just the reality of the defective technology of the day and it trained a whole generation of what sounds good because that sound was associated with songs they liked. Sound preferences are learned and they become the definition of what later sounds are measured against. Sort of like how any lover is judged by the reference of what you learned with. Objectively the "classics" of rock and roll were not good, drove parents crazy but for kids it became the definition of proper sound. The kids grew up seeking the same goal.
                      The distortion that some active elements induce happens to fit natural perception of sounds in the real world where even harmonics are dominate, but it still distortion.
                      Strange because I know a lot of people who aren't old farts that like distortion, including myself, and also I've never liked sociologists! Seems like a dull view to have of the world, that great sounding music is just great because people are conditioned to like it. Don't dis the best decades of history. You have said yourself that its hard to make something sound good without it. It might have been the limitation of technology in the day that made those great sounds but it was also the height of technology... you are right that distortion mimics real life because anything sounds dead without it. It feels loud and real when it isn't, I think is the main psychological aspect to this whole distortion thesis.

                      Im very sorry for my counter rant. Im just very "for" the idea that people in the 60's found an opportunity to make good sounds and taken advantage of that. If they wanted to play clean, they could have played more quietly rather than inventing fuzz pedals to put on their 100w guitar amps! I think your being very subjective in your objectivity.

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                      • #26
                        But were they good sounds? That is pretty subjective and based on learning during formative years. You might have a different opinion if born in the era of the big jazz bands when a whole society was immersed in a different sonic environment. A lot of kids later than the 50s and 60s where surrounded in rock of their parents day so acquired the taste for it, that the grandparents probably did not. Art of all sorts are a product of their era since it was made in the context of the current society. Some people were exposed to early tastes in art and keep an interest in it but few people who did not have early exposure care about past styles at all. I deal with thousands of visitors every summer and most want to visit the Hermitage/Winter Palace and its fabulous art collection. Most say they want to see the Rembrandt rooms and French Impressionists so those rooms are very crowded yet that leaves millions of equally significant works from other periods and schools unseen. Why? Why do visitors gravitate to two schools of art that are not dramatically at a different level than everything else? They were not raised in an art rich environment so only know vaguely those two names and assume the "famous ones" are better and should be treated with more respect. Societies where art is more integrated into daily life would have a broader base from which compare, contrast or simply experience.
                        I do not see any difference in music after working with it for decades, I find that there is less exposure to different genres than 30 years ago because of the delivery medium has become so personal. A person is only exposed to what they already like because they can do their own programming of their play lists and never have to be exposed to something outside of their zone of familiarity. That was the case before radio opened things up a lot in the 50s and 60s with stations playing a wide variety of music to the same audiences. That was the heyday of Top 40 which as a term was later considered degrading. The reality is that Top 40 was remarkably wide open. The Beatles where competing directly on the same stations with rock, jazz, country, folk, novelty and classical and had each of those types beat them out at various times. Like Al Hurt, Mrs Miller, Serendipity Singers, Jan and Dean, all the Motown artists who made R&B comfortable for white suburban kids, Dean Martin, Mitch Miller, Leslie Gore, Dick Dale, The 4 Seasons, Dave Brubeck, Louie Armstrong, Ramsey Lewis, Herb Alpert, Roger Miller, The Dixie Cups, The Ray Charles Singers and many more who all slugged it out for the same wide market and all had success. What ever was popular was played. Later when FM became dominate and stations began to narrow playlists listeners became much more isolated into genres. Before there were only a couple genres and most met in the middle.
                        Bill Graham of the SF dance hall fame tried, pretty successfully to expand exposure in his concert halls in the late 60s by booking obscure artists that the kids had never heard as filler between the 4-10 other bands playing on any random night. So between sets by Blue Cheer and the Dead, might be a 80 year old Delta Blues player or Ravi Shankar playing classical Indian music before the Beatles "discovered it" or African ethnic rhythmic groups or Highlife bands. Being exposed to it opened a lot of young people to a wider world of music. That trend did not last long and now the music spectrum is highly fragmented with isolated pockets of interest. After living through that I find it hard to understand why you think tastes are not taught by early exposure.
                        If you think that is dull, you are living a very sheltered life....there are whole realms invisible to you that you would have preferred if you had experienced it at a younger age.
                        Personally, I like all sorts of music but do not follow any particular style, prefer live bad bands than great recordings....I spent too much time behind the glass to be in awe of it. Most of the music I deal with now, as a listener, from the vantage point of the dance floor is dance music in clubs plus original jazz, and classical, opera etc. I am lucky to live in such a arts oriented city where all sorts of music, ballet, rock, dance, art and literature are integrated into daily life of most people from a young age. As a result the kids have to flip a coin to narrow their choice between seeing a new ballet staging or go see a rock concert on the same night.
                        Not liking sociologists? How many do you know?

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                        • #27
                          Originally posted by Wrongdog View Post
                          Okay there are other forums on the net to ask this but I figured some one hear could answer this question from a guitar amp design perspective:

                          What is the best values for filter caps in regards to tone and dynamics?? Why are guitar tube amps and old Hi-fi tube amps generally based on 40/20/20/20 type values and stages? I know Twins and big amps use 80uf etc...

                          A buddy just got this Dynaco SCA-35 intergrated hi-fi tube amp for free and wanted me to fix hum and put a grounded cord on it. The stock can caps were typical 60/40/20uf and a 50/50uf all at 450v. I was intrigued by Triode Electronics offering of unloaded cap board upgrade so I bought it. When it arrived with all the parts the 5 caps were ALL 200uf/500v. Is that a lot of capacitance? Don't you loose dynamics like pick attack if you over filter a guitar amp?? Why do bass amps tend to use larger values than a guitar amp generally?

                          Here is the link to the Cap board:

                          Dynaco SCA-35 Integrated Amplifier

                          I guess these are highly regarded entry level audiophile amps. I see there are board kits available to build them from scratch. Anyone have one or built one??
                          General rules of thumb for power supply filter caps:
                          Larger capacitance than the original is ok. Larger voltage than the original is also ok.

                          The devil is in the details... Two other capacitor specs can come into play here.

                          1) ESR (equivalent series resistance) describes the capacitors internal resistance, which affects the charge and discharge time constants. The lower the ESR the better for high fidelity amps. For instrument amps, it could affect the way the power sags after a large transient. If sag is desirable, you should try to match both the ESR and capacitance of the original part.

                          2) Maximum RMS current (also called Ripple Current) - - this value is determined from the ampacity (current carrying ability) of the internal connections within the cap. ESR also plays a part in this, because the internal heat generated by the part is determined by the amount of RMS AC current being shunted to ground and the ESR of the part (power in heat = current squared x resistance). In general, a larger value for Max RMS current is better.

                          Hope you find this helpful.
                          Last edited by philbo; 06-26-2012, 01:06 AM.

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                          • #28
                            Fender filter caps in twin high values?

                            Originally posted by philbo View Post
                            General rules of thumb for power supply filter caps:
                            Larger capacitance than the original is ok. Larger voltage than the original is also ok.

                            The devil is in the details... Two other capacitor specs can come into play here.

                            1) ESR (equivalent series resistance) describes the capacitors internal resistance, which affects the charge and discharge time constants. The lower the ESR the better for high fidelity amps. For instrument amps, it could affect the way the power sags after a large transient. If sag is desirable, you should try to match both the ESR and capacitance of the original part.

                            2) Maximum RMS current (also called Ripple Current) - - this value is determined from the ampacity (current carrying ability) of the internal connections within the cap. ESR also plays a part in this, because the internal heat generated by the part is determined by the amount of RMS AC current being shunted to ground and the ESR of the part (power in heat = current squared x resistance). In general, a larger value for Max RMS current is better.

                            Hope you find this helpful.
                            Very Useful information... I've been rebuilding a Fender Twin Reverb '75 that's just a chassis and replaced the Master Volume (broke back) with Old Stock and repared the Vibrato with a new "roach" and 50k ra pot. Decided to clean up sound starting with filter caps and was suprized to find Higher values 200 uf instead of the 100 uf's and 100 uf's in place of the three 20uf's. I also found one to the phase inverter broken contact. Soldered it back but these are bp brand electrolytics made in Japan. The 200uf's are in parallel=100uf, but what and why will happen with this and who would do this?????

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                            • #29
                              Originally posted by Hanger-18 View Post
                              Very Useful information... I've been rebuilding a Fender Twin Reverb '75 that's just a chassis and replaced the Master Volume (broke back) with Old Stock and repared the Vibrato with a new "roach" and 50k ra pot. Decided to clean up sound starting with filter caps and was suprized to find Higher values 200 uf instead of the 100 uf's and 100 uf's in place of the three 20uf's. I also found one to the phase inverter broken contact. Soldered it back but these are bp brand electrolytics made in Japan. The 200uf's are in parallel=100uf, but what and why will happen with this and who would do this?????
                              Two 200 uF caps in parallel give a total of 400 uF (the values add directly in parallel, different than resistors & coils). It's probably just a sloppy rebuild job....

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                              • #30
                                What is the voltages of caps in parallel rule? Two 200uf 350v caps parallel is now 400uf at 175v, right?? In series 100uf and 700v???

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