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Mundorf Audio-Grade Polypropylene Caps

The following is a list of prices for some capacitors sold by Mundorf, a massively audiophile-approved component company. Each capacitor is within the same product range ("EVO"), and apart from some differences in max voltage and tolerance (450VDC ~ 1000VDC, 3% ~ 2% tolerance) are all 1µF polypropylene film types designed for use in power decoupling/filtering stages in audio circuits.

1µF Mundorf Polypropylene Film Caps:

╔════════════════════════════════╦═════════════╗
║ Series                         ║ Price       ║
╠════════════════════════════════╬═════════════╣
║ EVO                            ║ €3.50       ║
║ EVO OIL                        ║ €7.99       ║
║ EVO Silver.Gold OIL            ║ €25.90      ║
║ EVO Supreme Silver.Gold OIL    ║ €69.90      ║
╚════════════════════════════════╩═════════════╝

I have little doubt that in a blind ABX listening test there probably isn't a single person on the planet who could consistently differentiate the pricier caps with greater than 50:50 accuracy, and that realistically what is being paid for is some combination of bragging rights and capacitor packaging sexiness (phwoar, look at that black and red one).

I know questions have been asked about whether different types of audiophile caps are anything but snake oil, but specifically my questions are:

  1. Given a single capacitance rating, would it even be physically possible for the human ear to hear the difference between the capacitors within a single "audiophile" capacitor range, as the Mundorf EVO range above? (e.g. swapping the standard "EVO" out for an "EVO Silver.Gold OIL")

  2. Would the difference in audio output even be instrument-measurable, and if so, what metric would constitute an "improvement" in quality? Lower THD? Lower ripple? Increase in pixie dust?

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    \$\begingroup\$ I don't know anything specific about these caps, but i know that ceramic capacitors have piezoelectric effect, meaning vibrations cause voltage changes (quite obviously) so maybe those are somehow vibration suppressive. That should be clearly statef in the datasheet. Although frankly i am afraid it's nothing more than a crystal ball for audiophiles. \$\endgroup\$
    – user76844
    Commented Aug 13, 2017 at 17:37
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    \$\begingroup\$ I use to do a bit of work for a guy (who had a good word-of-mouth reputation among audiophiles in the UK) who made his living hand-building amplifiers that cost ridiculous amounts of money (his cheapest prices were around £5,000 for a headphone amp). Off the record, he was perfectly happy to admit that everything about these amps was pure snake oil - but if fools were easily parted from their money, he saw no reason not to rip them off! He never measured any parameters of his products - his customers were perfectly happy to accept the statement that "real sound quality isn't measurable!!!!" \$\endgroup\$
    – alephzero
    Commented Aug 13, 2017 at 21:55
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    \$\begingroup\$ ... And of course his customers didn't realize that if they paid him £10,000 for a headphone amp plus CD player, the CD player mechanism and ADC was exactly the same as the one in a cheap computer system. But hey, if it cost 100 times as much as another product, it's obvious that it must sound 100 times better!! \$\endgroup\$
    – alephzero
    Commented Aug 13, 2017 at 22:03
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    \$\begingroup\$ @alephzero What they don't realize also is that the recorded music passed, during processing, through numerous pieces of equipment not using cork-sniffer-approved capacitors, resistors, op-amps, connectors. \$\endgroup\$
    – Kaz
    Commented Aug 14, 2017 at 4:34
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    \$\begingroup\$ (+1) Just for the Audiophoolery showcase! :-) It seems to me that even the manufacturer is mocking its customers: the pricier ones have OIL in them (snake oil, perhaps?!?) X-D \$\endgroup\$ Commented Aug 14, 2017 at 6:55

2 Answers 2

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Given a single capacitance rating, would it even be physically possible for the human ear to hear the difference between the capacitors within a single "audiophile" capacitor range

Yes (with an enormous caveat)

as the Mundorf EVO range above? (e.g. swapping the standard "EVO" out for an "EVO Silver.Gold OIL")

I almost read "snake oil grade", as everyone knows, the most expensive must sound better... at least twice as much if it's gold plated...

Would the difference in audio output even be instrument-measurable, and if so, what metric would constitute an "improvement" in quality? Lower THD? Lower ripple? Increase in pixie dust?

Yes, some guys measured distortion differences between caps and found stuff. Read the series here. Some of it is noticeable. For example mylar (MKT) generates third harmonic, and electrolytics suck hard if used in filters (but not if they're oversized and used as DC block, in this case a 50c cap will work fine). Ironically, cheap mass produced C0G ceramics trounce everything else with distortion like 0.1 part per million on a bad day. Cheap and practical. I like those. The solder flux remains on the board generate more distortion than a C0G cap. Yes, I checked, measured, and had to clean the damn thing twice with flux cleaner to remove the THD! LOL

Others tried to feed vibrations into the things and discovered (surprise!) that the huge ones ring mechanically. Since a capacitor is two plates, the cap value will wobble if the thing vibrates.

For example, I have a DC blocking cap at the input of an ultra low noise preamp in my lab. It's a film cap, and it makes a pretty good microphone.

Anyway, when a guy purchases set of snake oil caps for his loudspeaker crossover at a more expensive price than an active crossover plus a full set of amplifiers (or even better speakers), at this point I'd really begin to question his sanity...

To answer your question I wouldn't even remotely consider purchasing any of these doorknobs unless they cost like $5 and came with a full set of measurements explaining in excruciating detail why they are better than a $1 cap from mouser...

I mean, this isn't like the diodes from your other question where you can actually measure a difference in noise! This is lala-land. You might as well get a grounding box with that...

Also... yeah, I was about to forget this one. Decoupling. You know, caps have inductance, the bigger they are the more they have inductance. So if you want decoupling caps on your power supply, less inductance is better. This is why everyone uses SMD MLCC ceramics. Also you get one hundred for a buck. I mean, they work. They're practical and cheap. And performance (ie, ESL) is excellent.

Everyone ...except audiophiles, of course.

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    \$\begingroup\$ Yeah -- C0Gs are about as close to the ideal cap as one gets in this world -- too bad you can't get them in all the values you need for audio work! \$\endgroup\$ Commented Aug 13, 2017 at 17:33
  • \$\begingroup\$ They get piezoelectric. \$\endgroup\$
    – user76844
    Commented Aug 13, 2017 at 18:12
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    \$\begingroup\$ X7R and others are piezo, C0G/NP0 are not, dielectric is different. Also @ThreePhaseEel 100nF 100V C0G from murata costs 17€ for 100, that puts the 1µF cap at 1.70€ and I would trust that a lot more than a $69.99 gold plated doohickey! \$\endgroup\$
    – bobflux
    Commented Aug 13, 2017 at 19:57
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    \$\begingroup\$ @peufeu -- no kidding, even at $5 a cap for 470nF C0G (which is the biggest DK carries), that's still a better deal than $70 for some snake oil cap ;) \$\endgroup\$ Commented Aug 13, 2017 at 20:05
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    \$\begingroup\$ (P.S. Mouser has values in the µF range but in long tape/reel only as they're non-stock) \$\endgroup\$ Commented Aug 13, 2017 at 20:19
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The website "diyaudio.com" has thread "Simplistic NJFET RIAA" where many A_B comparisons have been made, in some cases with duplicate RIAA preamps side-by-side using different capacitors.

Having read the first 16,000 posts I'll try to summarize the thoughts on capacitors.

The spacing between the plates of foil-dielectric-foil capacitors.......will vary as the voltage varies. Thinking is the air between foil and dielectric is what allows the variation in spacing.

This variation is about -70dBc.

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