Simply locate your crossover and see the brand and size caps employed. I don't know the type of crossover, or how complex, used in your Coincident speaker. The cap values are printed on the cap.
Duelund caps are larger as they are oil types. Not sure how much room or where they are placed in your speaker. I removed the crossover from the box of my speaker and built an external crossover box so cap size is not an issue. This improves the sound by removing all the parts from the massive amount of vibrations in the bass cab of the speaker. It also helps by eliminating any interaction with the driver magnets.
Sound improved with the same parts and I took it even further with the upgraded caps.
My previous pair of $10,000 speakers used $15 Chinese caps. Hard to believe really.
If the bass cap is a large value like 50 or 60 uf , I would leave it alone and stick with the mids and highs.
The resistors and inductors used also greatly impact the sound, but the caps, in my experience with Duelund, offer the biggest improvement. Duelund makes great sounding resistors as does Mundorf for very reasonable money.
Duelund caps are larger as they are oil types. Not sure how much room or where they are placed in your speaker. I removed the crossover from the box of my speaker and built an external crossover box so cap size is not an issue. This improves the sound by removing all the parts from the massive amount of vibrations in the bass cab of the speaker. It also helps by eliminating any interaction with the driver magnets.
Sound improved with the same parts and I took it even further with the upgraded caps.
My previous pair of $10,000 speakers used $15 Chinese caps. Hard to believe really.
If the bass cap is a large value like 50 or 60 uf , I would leave it alone and stick with the mids and highs.
The resistors and inductors used also greatly impact the sound, but the caps, in my experience with Duelund, offer the biggest improvement. Duelund makes great sounding resistors as does Mundorf for very reasonable money.