I got around to playing with caps on the Mainline and wanted to share my impressions along with some below average pictures, and pose a question to the community. I have some cable tie anchors on the way, but I have a surplus of 3M Dual Lock (think non-gendered Velcro but on steroids) which actually works pretty well.
Obbligato Ultra Premiums:
I used the .1uf/1000V and the 10uf/1000V and I changed them out at the same time. @ 100 hours, I can't say that my impressions changed over that time.
- Much bigger difference that I anticipated caps would make
- Smooth and gooey, made the Mainline sound like a Crack (not really, just in that direction)
- With well-mastered modern recordings (non-acoustic instruments/vocals) goose bumps are common and my jaw hit the floor many times.
- With acoustic instruments/natural environment recordings, I am missing the fronts of the notes. I am missing clarity. Classical music just sounds mushy.
- Like above the bass and dynamics in general are really lacking for acoustic instruments. The more musicians on stage the more diffuse this all sounds.
- My goodness, the 3 dimensionality is on another level when listening to pop and hip-hop (Sam Smith, Kendrick Lamar, Taylor Swift (listening for the mastering not the content ))
- It is so odd that the 3D quality is gone with classical music. Sounds like just another diffuse tube amp
My vision for the Mainline is to highlight it's neutrality. While the Obbligato's were a nice journey (for very little $$$), this sound is not what I want for my Mainline.
ClarityCap CSA:
One of my goals in this initial fourrée was to try and determine the effect of using 15uf vs 10uf coupling caps. I left the .1uf/1000V Obbligatos in place as I only purchased the 15uf/250V ClarityCaps.
- Again not a big change after the first 25 hours, which is why I feel OK posting some pre-mature impressions
- Bass is more extended. I dislike that term. I mean that I can hear the bass region louder with slightly more detail than on the Obbligatos.
- The clarity in articulation is much better. It is still a little more diffuse that I remember the stock caps sounding, but this could very well be the .1 uf Obbligatos that are still there. In fact, I believe that I am hearing the Obbligatos based on that specific characteristics I am hearing.
- While it might seem that I have arrived at a nice combination, the total result is much less that the sum of its parts. On the HD800 (stock) this combo sounds very similar to the Garage1217 Ember. I can usually pick out the Mainline due to the size of the room vs. the space between the instruments. Either the Ember is really good with 800 (it was my first time pairing them), or this cap combo is robbing the Mainline of some of it's best traits. I can pick out the Mainline now mostly due to that slightly diffuse articulation.
- Weight. While I have most of the articulation back, the weight of each attack is now subdued. Perhaps another reason why this sounds so similar to the Ember?
I'm most likely going to pull the trigger on the .1 uf CuTF V-Cap, but I am still wanting some opinions on 10uf vs 15uf for the coupling caps. I have access to a Mainline with these V-Caps (he has the 10uf V-CAP ODAM) and I like what I hear. Based on my experiences, I may go with the 15uf V-CAP ODAM but I wanted to see if anyone had any objective feedback. Does moving to 15uf change the frequency response? If so, in what areas? Or maybe the differences between 10uf vs 15uf on the Mainline is purely subjective. I'm curious as to other's experiences in this area.