tapiochre
Computer
- Dec 3, 2004
- 9
Hello,
I have acquired a vintage (1970s) transistor amp (Sinclair Project Stereo 60). Its a 50W stereo amp kit for general use.
Docs say it needs an output capacitor on the line out of each amp and the cap specified is 1000uf 63V "anything less may cause a reduction in bass".
The artwork shows a mighty large 1000uf cap (appx 100mm x 35mm, with axial leads). I'm a bit new to this but can I not just use a physically smaller 1000uf/63V capacitor, modern technology being able to scale size down over the last 30 years or so?
If its a ripple current thing, I have NO idea what ripple current is applicable on this unit.
Any help anyone?
Chris
I have acquired a vintage (1970s) transistor amp (Sinclair Project Stereo 60). Its a 50W stereo amp kit for general use.
Docs say it needs an output capacitor on the line out of each amp and the cap specified is 1000uf 63V "anything less may cause a reduction in bass".
The artwork shows a mighty large 1000uf cap (appx 100mm x 35mm, with axial leads). I'm a bit new to this but can I not just use a physically smaller 1000uf/63V capacitor, modern technology being able to scale size down over the last 30 years or so?
If its a ripple current thing, I have NO idea what ripple current is applicable on this unit.
Any help anyone?
Chris