dfrattaroli":ao6fyos9 said:
Riffraff":ao6fyos9 said:
Any tech that tells you he needs to do a "Full Cap Job" in a 16 year old amps is a hack. Stay away from that guy. I've got a bunch of vintage amps and have recapped many of them myself. You don't touch the signal caps unless they fail. Just the electrolytic caps and typically just the filter caps in the power supply unless you are having cap related problems. The only amps I own that have had full cap jobs are 65+ year old tube PA conversions that had warty wax paper caps in them.
It seems there are definitely 2 schools of thought when it comes to caps. Some guys like to change them and others don't. I have no dog in the fight as I'm just trying to learn as much as I can. What I can tell you though is this particular tech definitely knows his stuff and is well respected.
Right now, I'd be thrilled if I could figure out the source of the static and remedy that first. I really appreciate everyone's input. Thanks!
I too have never heard of anybody replacing signal caps in an amp as part of long-term maintenance. Typically it's just the electrolytic filter/supply caps—unless there is evidence another cap is faulty. The ONLY caps you should be changing are the electrolytics. And you're saying your amp has 30 of them? Can you post a photo of your amp, please?
The other argument is how can a tech tell you your amp needs a "full cap job" without opening it up and checking? Just based on the age? Nah, I don't think so. Maybe I missed the part where you said this tech already checked the amp out?