Rhodes, I agree and I think that was what Bateman was trying to say too. The conventional wisdom is that all of the dielectrics except ceramic are linear. They have imperfections, but those imperfections are things like soakage and dielectric loss that can be modelled by RC networks, and as such are incapable of generating harmonic distortion, just minuscule variations in frequency response, and so should be inaudible.
So, according to this argument, the capacitor distortion is most probably a result of poor build quality, basically a glorified loose connection or microphonic of some sort. So many things in audio probably have a basis in truth of some sort, just not what you think.
I'm scratching my head over an old MOSFET hi-fi amp that sounds "anemic" right now. I wonder if some of those little blue caps got into it. They weren't ceramics by any chance?
So, according to this argument, the capacitor distortion is most probably a result of poor build quality, basically a glorified loose connection or microphonic of some sort. So many things in audio probably have a basis in truth of some sort, just not what you think.
I'm scratching my head over an old MOSFET hi-fi amp that sounds "anemic" right now. I wonder if some of those little blue caps got into it. They weren't ceramics by any chance?
Comment