
dgatwood
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First fire, then explosion -- kickass! Maybe a car chase next?
Are these caps of the variety that you should drain before futzing with?
If we were talking about 10,000 uF 500V or something, I'd say yes. 1,000 uF at 25-35V is probably enough to bite you a little or shoot some tiny sparks if you charge it up and suddenly discharge it (as I did with some 2,200/35 caps when I forgot to solder to the input of the voltage regulator in my power supply rework last week---oops!), but it's not a huge safety risk, IMHO.
Besides, they're tied to the power supply rail of the audio boards. Merely shutting the power switch off will cause the audio circuitry itself to discharge them fairly rapidly over the course of a couple of seconds or five.
BTW, just to clarify, explosion of capacitors is usually in the form of them slowly splitting open and leaking black, sticky goo. It's not an explosion in the "fire" sense of the word so much as the "may explode or leak if disposed of in fire" sense of the word. That said, if you replace these caps, be sure to get the polarity right. Putting one in backwards will result in a fairly loud explosion---again, not fire, but it sounds like a firecracker when it happens.

Fortunately, these are not the main power supply caps, so it is unlikely that a failure of these will cause any permanent damage to the gear unless they go off like a firecracker, in which case you might get corrosive, potentially toxic electrolyte everywhere.
