Dave Ladely
New Member
wht size/brand capacitor?
first of all, it is amazing how much power it really does take to reproduce an orchestra, since an orchestra puts out thousands of watts of accoustic energy. Since speakers are known to be about 10% efficient, and amps around 50% efficient, except for digital amps, the actual watts available to the listener is way less than the output of the amps. Again, go to the 3db rule. Seven clicks of the volume controll is about 7 stages of 3db difference, each requiring doubling of power! And seven clicks is not really loud at all. And requires over 1,200 watts when one starts with 10watt background volume. So, lets go a few more clicks on the volume control: next is 2,400 watts, next is 4800 watts, next is 9600 watts, and that is only three more clicks! Then consider the inefficiency problem on top of that. This is why a home stereo can't really reproduce a full orchestra accurately. But with more power the more realism as everyone familiar with home theater is aware: all other things being equal (speakers, etc) more powerful amps will produce an obviously more realistic effect. And some of those effects require a LOT of power. Even my 6000 watts cant quite reproduce some of those effects to a life like degree, though it is impressive. on one occasion, people were here and a railroad train was on tV and it almost seemed to go through the living room. Almost. Impressive none the less.
Large transformers are still in almost all high power home amps. A few have copied Bob Carver's smaller design that uses a tracking circuit to provide power on demand, ,but that tracking circuit is always a mllisecond or so behind the signal and no capacitor solves that problem. Carver's Sunfire amps are fine amps, but most high quality high power or even high quality amplifier manufacturers period, all use good sized power transformers, some very large, hence the weight of the amps. Check out Krell, McIntosh, Levinson, and all the other known quality amps, for example. And they use large capacitors for filtering AC. Sunfire and its imitators are actually an anomaly and viewed by many as compromises to save money and weight, which is true and even Bob Carver will agree, but he will also say he does not beleive that you will be able to hear the slight lag and no one so far has said they could.
If Bob Carver had not built the 700 watt Phase Linear, we would likely not have the power we do have now, since it really was ridiculed at first. The 150 watt amps were very much considered to be more than sufficient. You may not know that, as this was around 1969 that the 700 A came out and was reviewed in Audio Magazine. Now powerful amps are no novelty to say the least. ****, even cars have huge systems, and that is where I start to say it is too much, especially the DB drags, which are ego trips that are juvenile and kind of pathetic. Musical accuracy is the goal, not loudness, loudness alone is pathetic egos crying for ATTENTION.
Evidently some still believe that caps will make up for too low capacity alternators and batteries. I spoke this morning with Bryan Morrison, an electronic designer for the military, and he mentioned the capacitors he has seen with meters, etc., and agreed with my view that the alternator and batteries come first by a long shot. He mentioned that those spending 300 bucks for capacitors would be far better served by putting the money into a high capacity alternator and high capacity battery. The shurett battery, for example, is deep discharge, warranteed for 10 years, should last 15 years.
The electrons from the alternator and battery travel at the same speeds as those in a capacitor, and can supply the current faster than a bass note and will sustain the supply. A capacitor dumps its load before any bass note is complete. A battery filters out any anomalies, and outputs pure DC, since it also acts as a MONSTER cap, as a test with a scope will reveal.
I believe in solving problems at the source, not tacking on some cool looking expensive band aid first. Best to spend the money adding to the alternator's output and adding onto the battery capacity. The 8HD deep cycle in the trunk is a pretty good solution and it is close to the amps so the large cables can be shorter.
first of all, it is amazing how much power it really does take to reproduce an orchestra, since an orchestra puts out thousands of watts of accoustic energy. Since speakers are known to be about 10% efficient, and amps around 50% efficient, except for digital amps, the actual watts available to the listener is way less than the output of the amps. Again, go to the 3db rule. Seven clicks of the volume controll is about 7 stages of 3db difference, each requiring doubling of power! And seven clicks is not really loud at all. And requires over 1,200 watts when one starts with 10watt background volume. So, lets go a few more clicks on the volume control: next is 2,400 watts, next is 4800 watts, next is 9600 watts, and that is only three more clicks! Then consider the inefficiency problem on top of that. This is why a home stereo can't really reproduce a full orchestra accurately. But with more power the more realism as everyone familiar with home theater is aware: all other things being equal (speakers, etc) more powerful amps will produce an obviously more realistic effect. And some of those effects require a LOT of power. Even my 6000 watts cant quite reproduce some of those effects to a life like degree, though it is impressive. on one occasion, people were here and a railroad train was on tV and it almost seemed to go through the living room. Almost. Impressive none the less.
Large transformers are still in almost all high power home amps. A few have copied Bob Carver's smaller design that uses a tracking circuit to provide power on demand, ,but that tracking circuit is always a mllisecond or so behind the signal and no capacitor solves that problem. Carver's Sunfire amps are fine amps, but most high quality high power or even high quality amplifier manufacturers period, all use good sized power transformers, some very large, hence the weight of the amps. Check out Krell, McIntosh, Levinson, and all the other known quality amps, for example. And they use large capacitors for filtering AC. Sunfire and its imitators are actually an anomaly and viewed by many as compromises to save money and weight, which is true and even Bob Carver will agree, but he will also say he does not beleive that you will be able to hear the slight lag and no one so far has said they could.
If Bob Carver had not built the 700 watt Phase Linear, we would likely not have the power we do have now, since it really was ridiculed at first. The 150 watt amps were very much considered to be more than sufficient. You may not know that, as this was around 1969 that the 700 A came out and was reviewed in Audio Magazine. Now powerful amps are no novelty to say the least. ****, even cars have huge systems, and that is where I start to say it is too much, especially the DB drags, which are ego trips that are juvenile and kind of pathetic. Musical accuracy is the goal, not loudness, loudness alone is pathetic egos crying for ATTENTION.
Evidently some still believe that caps will make up for too low capacity alternators and batteries. I spoke this morning with Bryan Morrison, an electronic designer for the military, and he mentioned the capacitors he has seen with meters, etc., and agreed with my view that the alternator and batteries come first by a long shot. He mentioned that those spending 300 bucks for capacitors would be far better served by putting the money into a high capacity alternator and high capacity battery. The shurett battery, for example, is deep discharge, warranteed for 10 years, should last 15 years.
The electrons from the alternator and battery travel at the same speeds as those in a capacitor, and can supply the current faster than a bass note and will sustain the supply. A capacitor dumps its load before any bass note is complete. A battery filters out any anomalies, and outputs pure DC, since it also acts as a MONSTER cap, as a test with a scope will reveal.
I believe in solving problems at the source, not tacking on some cool looking expensive band aid first. Best to spend the money adding to the alternator's output and adding onto the battery capacity. The 8HD deep cycle in the trunk is a pretty good solution and it is close to the amps so the large cables can be shorter.


