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  • Re: Burning in hi-pass capacitors

    Originally posted by bkeane1259 View Post
    -- An 8.0uF NPE bypassed with a 0.22uF mylar, was the OEM high-pass filter. I wanted to do a quickie comparison against the Jantzens I have been running since the beginning of the year. The NPE+bypass measured 9uF….so I had to parallel my Jantzen to get the value to match.
    You lost me on the last sentence there? Running a "Jantzen" in parallel with a 9 µF network will increase the capacitance to something larger than 9 µF. What is the capacitance of the Jantzen you've been running since the beginning of the year?

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    • Re: Burning in hi-pass capacitors

      Originally posted by Herman Trivilino View Post
      You lost me on the last sentence there? Running a "Jantzen" in parallel with a 9 µF network will increase the capacitance to something larger than 9 µF. What is the capacitance of the Jantzen you've been running since the beginning of the year?
      Sorry...that does read awkward. I should have been more clear.

      I paralleled my Jantzens with two 0.22uF and one 0.1uF Sonicaps, getting me to 8.94uF on the Jantzen side. The other speaker was running the cheapo NPE + mylar bypass -- the measurement there was 9.0uF.

      There was absolutely nothing scientific about this test....just for fun basically, yet revealing. I may buy a couple more NPE's to try to match the 8.4uF values of my other matched sets, and then include the NPE in my second test. I have to say though.....I DID run the first test tonight and it was a disaster.

      I will post more tomorrow.
      Bryan K.

      Midwest Audio Club

      Speedster | Sub Attaché | The Wildeman | Sean's NLA Towers | COÜGAR, COUGAR II and COÜGAR JR | Triton | Lithium | J-Boom | Trym MLTL | Docere MLTL

      Comment


      • Re: Burning in hi-pass capacitors

        Tried the "can you tell the difference between a cooked cap and a new cap" test tonight with a few friends and relatives. It was a complete mess.

        Most participants noticed a difference, but had a hard time articulating exactly what the difference was. I had 8 listeners ranging from young teens to 40-somethings. I was prepared to go several rounds, but I ended up changing my original source music (1 a-Capella, 1 normal song, 1 drum track), to songs that were more widely known by ALL participants.

        I need to rethink how to conduct this test. I'm open to suggestions.

        Here's what tonight's setup looked like. I was the engineer.....I'm not participating in the listening.

        Bryan K.

        Midwest Audio Club

        Speedster | Sub Attaché | The Wildeman | Sean's NLA Towers | COÜGAR, COUGAR II and COÜGAR JR | Triton | Lithium | J-Boom | Trym MLTL | Docere MLTL

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        • Re: Burning in hi-pass capacitors

          I suggest you seriously consider using a simple pink noise track as one of the listener tracks. Some years back in the 'old' days when Stereophile was still located in Santa Fe, NM, they ran a series of speaker evaluation panel tests using their own writers. I still have the original articles. There were numerous music tracks and a pink noise track. The one track that had the most consistent scores good or bad among all of the panelists was the pink noise track. All the others, had much more variability and thus confusion ensued about which speaker rated best.
          Listening to pink noise requires some patience. The sound should be well balanced and a gentle hiss. Any distortion or peaks in the response are more easily detectable.
          Live in Southern N.E.? check out the CT Audio Society web site.

          Comment


          • Re: Burning in hi-pass capacitors

            Originally posted by bkeane1259 View Post
            I paralleled my Jantzens with two 0.22uF and one 0.1uF Sonicaps, getting me to 8.94uF on the Jantzen side. The other speaker was running the cheapo NPE + mylar bypass -- the measurement there was 9.0uF.

            There was absolutely nothing scientific about this test....just for fun basically, yet revealing.
            This is a perfect comparison, then, for your test. If the difference really is obvious, your tests will confirm it.

            Comment


            • Re: Burning in hi-pass capacitors

              Originally posted by bkeane1259 View Post
              I need to rethink how to conduct this test. I'm open to suggestions.
              Your test subjects need to listen with pen and paper in hand. Let them hear what A and B sound like, as many times as they want. If they claim they can tell a difference, the game is on! Tell them that you're now going to run a test to see if they really can tell a difference.

              Announce that this is Run 1. Flip a coin and play A if it's heads, B if it's tails, but don't let them see the result of the coin toss. Ask them to write down either A or B on their paper next to Run 1. (Again, they should have the opportunity to listen to both A and B as many times as it takes them to decide, but they can't ask for them by name. They have to say something like "Let me hear that first one again".)

              Then flip the coin again, announce that this is Run 2, and repeat. And of course, neither can the test subjects.

              It'll be tedious, so you may have to bribe your test subjects to get them to continue.

              And remember, the person flipping the switch can't know which cap (A or B) is the burned-in cap, or the NPE cap, or whatever.

              Comment


              • Re: Burning in hi-pass capacitors

                Originally posted by billfitzmaurice View Post
                +1. No moving parts=no burn in.

                IMO any cap manufacturer that recommends burn in is a purveyor of snake oil and should not be rewarded with your business.
                My limited knowledge and my strong intuition along with my ears more or less agree with you.

                However, I will say this. I have found tubes to grow more quiet after a few hours of "break-in". I also get an impression of subtle sonic changes as well, perhaps just my imagination.

                What I find incredulous is the "Cable Asyum" forum at another Web site. There, the audiophiles have no qualms about spending $500 - $1K+ for cables. Then they post rave reviews after a 100+ hours of cable "break-in".

                What in the world is there to "break-in" on a cable? How can you possibly distinguish performance "before" and "after" a break-in, over a period of weeks?
                Jazz Wine HiFi

                Comment


                • Re: Burning in hi-pass capacitors

                  Originally posted by jimofoakcreek View Post
                  .............
                  What in the world is there to "break-in" on a cable? How can you possibly distinguish performance "before" and "after" a break-in, over a period of weeks?
                  You can't, because psychoacoustics is a marvelous thing.....one aspect of it is the brain's ability to adjust to sounds over the long term, thus giving the allusion of 'break-in' when, in fact, the brain is 'breaking -in'.
                  Live in Southern N.E.? check out the CT Audio Society web site.

                  Comment


                  • Re: Burning in hi-pass capacitors

                    Originally posted by Herman Trivilino View Post
                    Your test subjects need to listen with pen and paper in hand. Let them hear what A and B sound like, as many times as they want. If they claim they can tell a difference, the game is on! Tell them that you're now going to run a test to see if they really can tell a difference.

                    Announce that this is Run 1. Flip a coin and play A if it's heads, B if it's tails, but don't let them see the result of the coin toss. Ask them to write down either A or B on their paper next to Run 1. (Again, they should have the opportunity to listen to both A and B as many times as it takes them to decide, but they can't ask for them by name. They have to say something like "Let me hear that first one again".)

                    Then flip the coin again, announce that this is Run 2, and repeat. And of course, neither can the test subjects.

                    It'll be tedious, so you may have to bribe your test subjects to get them to continue.

                    And remember, the person flipping the switch can't know which cap (A or B) is the burned-in cap, or the NPE cap, or whatever.
                    That's excellent Herman. I just want to add: remember, it's data collection, nothing more or less. It's not an attempt to prove a point or anything at all. So you need a test that will accurately assess capacitor audibility. Expectation and sight bias need to go out the window.

                    Dan
                    "guitar polygamy is a satisfying and socially acceptable alternative lifestyle."~Tony Woolley
                    http://dtmblabber.blogspot.com/
                    http://soundcloud.com/dantheman-10

                    Comment


                    • Re: Burning in hi-pass capacitors

                      Originally posted by dantheman View Post
                      That's excellent Herman. I just want to add: remember, it's data collection, nothing more or less. It's not an attempt to prove a point or anything at all. So you need a test that will accurately assess capacitor audibility. Expectation and sight bias need to go out the window.
                      Well, it can in the mind of an individual constitute proof or disproof. For example, if I were bkeane and were unable to the difference between the NPE caps and the film caps with my own self-designed test, it would constitute proof that I was unable to hear a difference that I was previously convinced I was able to hear.

                      Conversely, if I were able to verify my ability to hear the difference, that might cause me to conclude I'd proven my point. However, speaking for myself, I would need more evidence before I was convinced that films sounded better than NPE's when used in series with a tweeter. All I'd have really proved is that I can hear a difference in one specific case. Catch me on another day, listening to a different kind of music with different speakers in a different room, I might instead conclude that the NPE's sound "better". Or, I might not be able to verify that I can hear a difference.

                      I know what you mean, in the end it's just data. Nevertheless, interpretation of data can and has led to significant advancements in civilizations. The philosophers can go on and on about how the data proves nothing, meanwhile engineers and scientists are using it to develop new and improved technologies that make my existence a lot better than it otherwise would have been.

                      Comment


                      • Re: Burning in hi-pass capacitors

                        Originally posted by Herman Trivilino View Post
                        Well, it can in the mind of an individual constitute proof or disproof. For example, if I were bkeane and were unable to the difference between the NPE caps and the film caps with my own self-designed test, it would constitute proof that I was unable to hear a difference that I was previously convinced I was able to hear.

                        Conversely, if I were able to verify my ability to hear the difference, that might cause me to conclude I'd proven my point. However, speaking for myself, I would need more evidence before I was convinced that films sounded better than NPE's when used in series with a tweeter. All I'd have really proved is that I can hear a difference in one specific case. Catch me on another day, listening to a different kind of music with different speakers in a different room, I might instead conclude that the NPE's sound "better". Or, I might not be able to verify that I can hear a difference.

                        I know what you mean, in the end it's just data. Nevertheless, interpretation of data can and has led to significant advancements in civilizations. The philosophers can go on and on about how the data proves nothing, meanwhile engineers and scientists are using it to develop new and improved technologies that make my existence a lot better than it otherwise would have been.
                        Bkeane can't loose site of the fact that different ESR's (NPE vs film is an example) will most likely result in different SPL's out of the speaker with only just the simple switching going on, resulting in film types being favored or at least easily differentiated over the NPE's because the NPE's play a bit softer. Volume level matching is CRITICAL in any BT or DBT cap comparison test.
                        This SPL difference may be what Bkeane heard with his quick test before the more rigorous film vs film tests were run.
                        The Clarity Cap's study is an example with its initial, large un-trained panel of listeners able to differentiate between NPE's and film types. However, when it came to comparing film to film, CC had to resort to a trained golden ear'd panel and a special test protocol.

                        Match those volume levels and listen for other audible attributes besides louder vs softer.
                        Live in Southern N.E.? check out the CT Audio Society web site.

                        Comment


                        • Re: Burning in hi-pass capacitors

                          Herman, I wasn't saying the data shouldn't be interpreted, just that the test shouldn't be designed to try and prove a position. IOW, we shouldn't care what the results are, just how we got to them. That's like intro to engineering.

                          Level matching is utterly essential for sure Carlspeak. Thanks for bringing it up.

                          Dan
                          "guitar polygamy is a satisfying and socially acceptable alternative lifestyle."~Tony Woolley
                          http://dtmblabber.blogspot.com/
                          http://soundcloud.com/dantheman-10

                          Comment


                          • Re: Burning in hi-pass capacitors

                            Thanks for all the tips, guys!! :D

                            I really want it to be done correctly.


                            We'll revisit the testing next weekend.
                            Bryan K.

                            Midwest Audio Club

                            Speedster | Sub Attaché | The Wildeman | Sean's NLA Towers | COÜGAR, COUGAR II and COÜGAR JR | Triton | Lithium | J-Boom | Trym MLTL | Docere MLTL

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                            • Re: Burning in hi-pass capacitors

                              Just wondering if you got around to running the tests and if you have any results to show us.

                              Dave.

                              Comment


                              • Re: Burning in hi-pass capacitors

                                Originally posted by oldnwrinkly View Post
                                Just wondering if you got around to running the tests and if you have any results to show us.

                                Dave.
                                My initial attempt was a flop (I posted about it). I revised the testing methodology per the advice from a few helpful posters and decided to try straight up pink noise -- not well received by my sons. They were the only second-round testers. I have not tried since.

                                I'm still going to. I just recently bought measurement equipment and software, so I'm attempting a self-administered crash course in FR measurement -- just not enough time in the day.

                                I plan to try again with both listeners and measuring equipment. I've certainly NOT ditched the idea. I still have the testing caps (cooked and new). I still don't know which are which. They are presently collecting a bit of dust while I get my rear into gear.
                                Bryan K.

                                Midwest Audio Club

                                Speedster | Sub Attaché | The Wildeman | Sean's NLA Towers | COÜGAR, COUGAR II and COÜGAR JR | Triton | Lithium | J-Boom | Trym MLTL | Docere MLTL

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