Hi Grainger
Thanks again for your input.
This question arose as a result of becoming a Lowther owner about 3 years ago (Acousta 115s with silver-coiled DX3 drivers). Most program sounds brilliant but some material (with a lot of sibilants) has a little HF "tizz" which isn't there when I listen through headphones. (The Lowthers can be ruthlessly revealing.) This may of course be nothing to do with the power amps or speakers - am still s/s for my preamp, I haven't got around to building my Foreplay yet - but that's another story. (See post elsewhere.)
I like Audio Note paper-in-oils (haven't heard any of the latest generation of film in oils yet). Used to have ANs as inter-stage caps on the parasex amps. Swapped them for Auricap film and foils and was surprised to hear very little difference. I did a lot of cap comparisons about 15 years ago when I was developing a s/s headphone amp:
- I dislike most stuff described as "metallized" (although I think the Solens are in this category - perhaps they use more metal?).
- Most things with "foil" in the name are worth a try.
Had a quick look at your suggestions. Apart from the price, Teflon stuff seems to take an ice age to run in. (I have some home-rolled Teflon interconnects inspired by Allen Wright's "Supercables Cook Book" - very nice but boy did they take some time to sound their best.) The Obligato caps look worth a punt. It would least indicate whether the caps in that spot have a significant effect on the sound.
Will post when I've tried these.
John
Amateur Audiophile and Backstreet Boffin.
Original Foreplay with C4S + Sweet Whispers
ParaSEX amps with MQ nickel-cored outputs
Factory-built Lowther Acousta 115s with silver-coiled DX3s, wired in DNM solid-core
KEF active sub (help for the last couple of octaves).
Bottlehead DAC on batteries.