I was never under that impression. The cap releases small quantities of stored energy to your amp when needed. I didn't think it was necessary to explain such a simple notion.Just like a capacitor a car's battery is a storage device and nothing more. While it is true a cap can discharge that stored energy more quickly than a typical battery due to lower internal resistance at the end of the day it is no more than energy storage and nothing more. If you are somehow under the mistaken impression that a car's battery is actually supplying that energy then you're more foolish than the other respondants to this thread whom you are calling foolish. Where, then, did that energy contained within the battery and/or capacitor originate? I'll leave it to you to figure that out.
David navoneTightly regulated power supplies are great for test bench applications; however, musical program material typically has both loud and soft passages... In fact the thing that makes music so interesting, as opposed to listening to pure sine waves, is the transient peaks and dips. Dips are not a problem --- but the transient peaks take instant power, not regulated rails. This is why a Stiffening Capacitor can improve the Peak response of an audio system.
Lets not argue with the experts?
