Now that I've upgraded my S.E.X. amp to the "enhanced" version, I've begun to notice something interesting with the Quickie that I'd like to fix. The S.E.X. amp (sans Quickie, straight from the DAC) now has really deep bass, such that I can actually feel the lowest notes in some recordings through my headphones. That's really impressive! The problem is that I like how the amp sounds with the Quickie between it and my sources - recordings are more natural, and midrange more vivid and "real" sounding through the Quickie. The soundstage comes forward a bit as well, and is less flat. I'm assuming this is the storied "DHT" sound I hear so much about? The cost, though, is low bass. The Quickie seems to begin its "roll off" sooner than the S.E.X. amp, so although I'm gaining warmth and sweet mids, I'm losing the impact of low notes (and thus, one of the biggest the benefits of my new MQ irons) when inserting it in my chain. In fact, I've noticed that bass notes are less clean with it in the signal path, which I'm attributing to the loss of the lowest frequencies.
The question is, are the coupling caps at fault here, or is it the chokes? With 3.7k/150H plate chokes, I'd assume the parafeed caps would have to be slightly bigger than the stock 2uF in there now. Larger caps would give a better damping factor and lower -3dB point. But, I also recall that plate chokes tend to be better at loading the tubes at higher frequencies, and are worse at low ones than something like a CCS. So, I'm wondering if I should bother a) raising the value of the coupling caps to 3 or 4uF, or b) just get rid of the chokes altogether in favor of the PJCSS? For the latter, I'm assuming a 2uF parafeed cap would still be flat down to sub-sonic frequencies?