Burn in Capacitor phenomena


Hello,

I just wanted to post about something I've just experienced with burning capacitors and a theory on a contributing reason to why they may sound different with time on them.

I made a capacitor burn in rig that play's music through the capacitors for burn in. During startup of this rig I noticed as the electric pulses of music pass through the capacitors they vibrate. That is you can hear the capacitors playing music. Over time I've noticed the volume or vibrational amplitude seems to have gotten slightly smaller. I am just throwing this out there, but my hypothesis is; that as electricity passes through, there is heating and swelling of the parts, the parts then undergo greater pressures and a greater sense of malleability and stickyness for a lack of a better word. These parts begin to Stick together and oils or plastics begin to settle into imperfections in the surface of the foils, ie: the parts meld causing a less ressonant (or perhaps a coupled resonance allowing the capacitor to resonate as a whole) sum of parts.

Why else would the capacitor become percievably less quieter? Other than a drop in frequency or less resonant.
perhaps because it's burning out, haha, I hope not.

Anyway I notice a difference in capacitor sound quality with time, and typically it sounds better as a less resonant capacitor probably would.

Thoughts?
scutterflux
Geoffkait:
All caps are apparently microphonic. That's why those tiny little 3 mm (contrained layer) VTS dots from Marigo when stuck onto the tops of all caps improve the sound.

...but when they go bad they're REALLY microphonic
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Just wanted to mention All my new caps are doing this, I have some Vcap cutf that do it, some solen tftf that are doing it, they all seem to be doing it. I can't wait until my Duelund cast arrive, they are supposed to be very limited in their resonance and partly due to the high price, we'll see...
If new caps are microphonic, than the culprit may be not in caps. Active devices tube, transistors are more likely to react to microphony. Touching caps will give you humm won't it? It probably humms without touching to some degree.