Question About Capacitor Upgrade in Tube Amp


Hi,

I am preparing to do a coupling capacitor upgrade on a recently purchased tube integrated amp. The two 0.22uF on the preamp tubes are fairly straight forward. But I noticed another similar model 0.33uF cap on the large filter capacitor for the B+ supply that is installed across the hot lead to ground.

Does this cap on the B+ just block high frequency noise from the power supply or does it have any effect on the amp tone? Is there any reason to "upgrade" this cap?

I know it may be hard to tell exactly what is going on without a schematic.

Also any recommendations on a good cap to use in the upgrade of the coupling caps? I was looking at Mundorf SilverGoldOil for the quality at not too crazy a price. The amp already sounds good but lacks a little clarity that I think a coupling cap swap will help with. It is SET 300B amp.

Thank you!

 

calieng

Thanks! I will take a look. I have watched a few of his other videos before. Seems like a nice guy in addition to all his knowledge.

@perkri 

Depending on how long you plan on keeping the amp, buy the best capacitors you can justify putting into it. They will make a difference.

Yes! 👍

Charles 

Owning a Willsenton myself, I‘m curious about upgrade options. Please keep us posted!

First: disregard zipost's rude comments. He's just grumpy because he only took second prize in the local village idiot competition. Hey zippy, better luck next time.

The Willsenton marked 0.33ufd cap is there to shunt any noise (high frequency crud) to ground. This is after the rectifying diodes where the AC is being converted to DC and any noise/hash not handled by the bigger cap is 'captured' by the small 0.33ufd and directed to ground, hopefully leaving the B+ supply in pristine condition. So to answer your fair question: Yes, it will most definitely effect the sound and the correct choice will do more than just improve tone. Think blacker background allowing more detail to be heard and all the benefits of that.

The purity of the power supply is paramount in any audio device as witnessed by the plethora of LPS units available to replace those cheap, small and generally noisy switching units. I have used a Mundorf Supreme (0.22ufd, think it was the Supreme) across the last cap in the PS with positive results. Do some research specifically on PS bypass caps.

Regarding the coupling caps: @charles1dad has some good advice. They will/can also have an effect on the end result. Duelund make a 0.01ufd cap for bypass duties and are very very good. In this coupling position you are preventing the HV DC from appearing on the output terminals and here you will find you can 'flavour' the sound. Ideally you are trying to 'do no harm' to your precious signal.

Miflex, Jupiter, Duelund, and many more to consider. The link to the cap shootout is a great guide.