I brought this exchange between me and Paul Joppa over from the old board. The Bottlehead selections for the two capacitors in question are hard to beat, but I wanted to get the information over here.
Grainger: After being in on the assembly of an Eros last weekend I spent some time looking at the schematic. I see two large value capacitors that seem to be in the Pentode's and Triode's cathode circuits. It looks like a transistor is also in the Triode's cathode circuit so it may be a C4S.
Would there be any value to bypassing either of those capacitors?
Thanks,
PJ: Those capacitors do carry signal current and may well affect the sound. The one in the EF86 cathode operates at very small signal voltages, so it is subject to noise pickup - I'd keep any bypass as physically small as possible, be sure the outer foil is the ground side, etc. The transistor is part of the servo bias arrangement, which was not present in the Repro Amp but was added so that a wider variety of EF86s would bias up correctly.
For the 6922 cathode we used a Black Gate in the first high-end Repro Amp version of this circuit. Feel free to experiment with better caps or bypasses.
Grainger: Short leads rules out any of my Teflon KKs. They are all huge for the values.
I priced some BG caps and WOW! I'll save up for these and get all my ducks in a row before entering the fray. IIRC that is the 4V cap so it isn't as bad as the 160V cap.
Do you have any suggestions for improved electrolytics? I suppose low ESR is a good thing here?
And finally, concerning the outer foil of the capacitor, I have seen on a number of caps the outer foil is the short lead. Is that always true, usually true?
Thanks,
PJ: For the 4v capacitor, we chose an organic polymer type because they have a pretty good reputation for sound, are very compact, and are available in low voltages. I think Os-Con is the most well-known variety, but the large value we wanted is only available by special order with a 12 week delivery quote. Ed made the final selection; maybe he'll say something? Generally electrolytic capacitors work best at 30% to 80% of their rated maximum voltage.
The main performance feature that is measurable is the ability to maintain a low ESR at high frequencies, up to and beyond 100kHz. The modern Panasonics that we've used for several years are designed for switching power supplies, so they need that HF performance. I look for a good temperature rating too, at least 85C and I generally prefer 105C but can't always make it work out - cost, availability, and size are among the many other constraints.