Thats what I've been saying for years.I'm no engineer,and really could care less from ESR,but I have never changed a set of old caps,even for people who swore they didnt need them,I even had one who got his amp back from Mesa and was told his caps were fine,and didnt have the owner amazed at the improvement.Shep said:I have to say reading the value of all the cap's in my C+ where fine so read better than the new ones i was replacing them with , but when i replaced them the tone was improved to a point that's almost silly i didn't do it sooner.Amazing to think What they can do.
Sure,the amp sounds fine,but if you change the caps,it will sound better,I can guarantee that.Like I've said before I get people all the time saying they dont need caps,the amp is fine.I always give the guarantee that if the fresh filters dont make a noticable improvement I will put the old ones back,no charge.I've never had to put them back.I rarely saw Boogie amp repairs before I found this board a couple of years ago,I must have done 100 Boogies in the last 2 years or so.90 of them cap jobs,and half of them for "doubters" who now see that caps do need to be changed from time to time just like tubes.Its really something you have to experience to see what kind of improvements it makes,after doing it to an otherwise good sounding amp you will realize that your bass was flabby and the overall response wasnt tight as it could be.Oh,and this,in my opinion is only true if you use top quality caps.I like Sprague and F&T only.I have done a bunch of cap jobs on fairly recent Fenders,and the Sprague and F&T's gave a big improvement over the fairly new Taiwanese crap the factory uses.DrewV said:Sorry for taking so long! I thought I posted . The transformers look good. I did a cap job a little over two years ago ( all electrolytics). I think swapping out tubes is a good idea. Also, I hadn't thought about cleaning the pots. They have never been cleaned. Re: Old Caps. Yesterday a friend brought over a Fender Champ. A 1954 Tweed Fender Champ Combo with an 8" speaker. One 6v6, one 12ax7 and one 6W4. He's had the amp for >20 years and never looked inside...so we did! Totally original guts...maybe twenty caps and resistors. The amp fires right up and sounds fantastic, like a mini Bassman to my ear. Now, here's my question, How can caps that are 54 years old not only work, but sound fantastic?!! Boogiebabies, thanks for the great info! DrewV
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