Thanks for the responses, guys. Lot’s of good information.
A couple of thoughts on your comments.
1. The Amazon negative reviewer may not be a full fledged troll. More like a combination of two things: (i) a little knowledge is a dangerous thing and (ii) the internet is a great way to show off how knowledgeable (you think) you are.
2. On the subject of heat reducing the life expectancy of an electrolytic cap, the prior generations of Oppo players had a fan for cooling. Some owners complained about the fan noise, and the fan has been removed from 103 and 105. Wonder if this will have any effect on the capacitors.
3. From the Wikipedia article linked in Rodman99999's comment I learned that manufacturers provide life span specs for given temperature environments and current loads, so designers of electronics are not working in the dark. A failure of a cap is really a flaw in the design of the circuit, the point that Ralph made. An exception would be the defectively designed caps coming out of Taiwan in the mid-2000's.
A couple of thoughts on your comments.
1. The Amazon negative reviewer may not be a full fledged troll. More like a combination of two things: (i) a little knowledge is a dangerous thing and (ii) the internet is a great way to show off how knowledgeable (you think) you are.
2. On the subject of heat reducing the life expectancy of an electrolytic cap, the prior generations of Oppo players had a fan for cooling. Some owners complained about the fan noise, and the fan has been removed from 103 and 105. Wonder if this will have any effect on the capacitors.
3. From the Wikipedia article linked in Rodman99999's comment I learned that manufacturers provide life span specs for given temperature environments and current loads, so designers of electronics are not working in the dark. A failure of a cap is really a flaw in the design of the circuit, the point that Ralph made. An exception would be the defectively designed caps coming out of Taiwan in the mid-2000's.