Hi Paul,
> there will always be some differences between channels. They will usually be very subtle,
Yes - this was what I had in mind in step 4 : "Compare L & R with the stock Daytons - satisfy oneself that they sound more or less the same."
Of course there is an assumption being tested there
If they don't sound "more or less" the same, then that is another rabbit hole for exploration!
> very small differences in level ....
Yeah I was thinking about that after I posted. I might measure that. If they were significantly off then perhaps one would need to take steps to trim the levels (maybe at the source).
Hi Lee,
Yes, that's exactly the sort of thing I had in mind.
I did also think that one could sum the two outputs, but with one phase reversed, and directly monitor the difference signal. Of course, as Paul J points out there are other contributing differences in the channels and one would be listening to all of these differences, not just the differences between the caps.
I think that it might be a useful discovery technique though - for example, I would have thought that if there is any extra bottom end change when changing the cap value, then it would be readily discerned in the difference signal.