High all. If a high pass is realized using the RC and or LC coupling within a power amp, the phase shift at the cutoff frequency is 90 degrees, right? I'm assuming that one of the advantages to doing this is that the cap is going to be there anyway, influencing he sound, and that going to a smaller value might also allow for a higher quality cap and so maybe a better sound. If a cap was added at the input, and both the RC interstage cap and parafeed cap were made smaller, and all three were "tuned" to the same frequency, it would seem like in addition to the 6dB/ octave high passes summing to 18dB/octave, the phase shifts would also sum to 270 degrees. If this is true and only a 1st-order high pass is required, and realized by resizing the parafeed cap, how much lower in frequency should the other 1st-order high passes be so as not to interfere with the simpler 90 degree phase shift at cutoff, but also improve linearity in the preceding stages by reducing part of the LF signal? For example, would sizing the input cap high pass one octave below the parafeed cap one serve to improve linearity without effecting the desired 6dB/octave roll-off and 90 degree phase shift? Thanks for any light being shed on this! --keto