As I've said in other threads, I'm just a mechanical engineer, so go easy on me
I'm also really really cheap! LOL
Noticed one day my 30 yo Criterion 2005 speakers (with replaced woofers) just didn't sound like I wanted them to. So, just for fun I started fooling around with braided CAT5 (extra from house wiring project), and was shocked at the improvement. BUT, in the process had to replace the binding post, and managed to crack a capacitor. Since the wife got the new puppy, she said I could buy new speakers and settled on Beta 50's. Before I spent the $1,000 (which BTW freaked her out) going to take one more stab at the speakers. Put in replacement 15mF film(?) capacitors and suddenly my 2-way speakers have wonderful sound, including the missing midrange.
Now for the question, what does the capacitor do, and why did I hear the improvement in the mid range? Also, why didn't the cracked capacitor sound any different from the non cracked one?