Question:

Does a Capacitor limit your amp?

by  |  earlier

0 LIKES UnLike

I am asking because I seem to always "juice up" my amp's settings (like bass boost, low pass, subsonic, bass level, etc.) and it'll sound a bit deeper at first, but after a while, it seems it goes back to how it was before I fine tuned it....

Could it be something to do with my capacitor?

 Tags:

   Report

7 ANSWERS


  1. yes


  2. A cap stores energy for use when needed.

  3. If your capacitor 'leaks' it will do what you described, the cap will blow or make a high pitch squeal eventually.  This also can be caused because you are overloading the limits of the capacitor.

  4. It depends on how the capacitor is being used. Most often it is  for a by-pass  filter. This keeps noise out of the system and other are  used in the speaker bridge.

    They are rated by max amp,  but I don' think it is a single capacitor that could cause that. The rating on the speaker bridge needs to match the amp. If you bought the speakers in a set the amp rating of the speakers needs to exceed the output of the amp.

  5. Capacitors are often used in electric and electronic circuits as energy-storage devices. They can also be used to differentiate between high-frequency and low-frequency signals. This property makes them useful in electronic filters. the answer is no.

  6. no it backs up the battery  it doesnt go dead

  7. What cap and where in the system????? There'd be dozens and dozens of caps in any electronic device... if you mean a non-polarized filtering cap on a speaker live, changing it only changes the frequecy cross-over point (the range of frequencies allowed through to the speaker) and does NOT increase power.

Question Stats

Latest activity: earlier.
This question has 7 answers.

BECOME A GUIDE

Share your knowledge and help people by answering questions.
Unanswered Questions