coupling caps should ideally be rated for the full unloaded B+ the amp can possibly produce, 630V caps covering most amps out there. but i've come across several amps that use 400V caps throughout, when the unloaded B+ is capable of being much higher. for example, the SLO100 (at least the older ones) uses 400V coupling caps, despite the B+ reaching close to 600V unloaded.
i've been doing extensive work on an early Mesa Studio 22 from 1985, including a conversion to the 22+, that's been a real workhorse and had some heavy heat damage and tons of bad solder joints, but is now turning out great. (landed on a great recipe for addressing the bias issues in a way that enhances clarity, happy to share if anyone's curious) part of that work was moving the Standby out of the DC path, into an audio mute shorting the power tube grids together.
this amp uses 400V coupling caps throughout, Sprague 715P's, and on one of the start up cycles, one of the caps shorted, the .1 bass cap in the tonestack. this cap isn't anywhere close to any area i was working on, or that had issues. and it's one of the ones i would think would be least likely to fail, with both the plate resistor and slope resistor between it and the high voltage supply.
this got me wondering if there's any chance i could have possibly worsened the conditions for these caps by removing the DC standby. currently, the B+ floats up to 470V for about 5-8 seconds on startup, then settles to 400V. i've been under the impression that this more prolonged no-load over-voltage when starting up with no Standby, is generally preferable to the more instantaneous over-voltage along with large inrush current, which happens when a DC Standby switch is closed. but i most often see that discussion centering around the switch itself and the filter caps... perhaps for the coupling caps, the duration of over-voltage is more important?
i'm mainly hoping to evaluate how pressing it may be to upgrade all of these to 630V caps, and to better interpret the datasheet values surrounding this concern. looking at the 715P datasheet, it states that all caps rated 800VDC or less can tolerate 250% of rated voltage for up to 5 seconds, which i would think would well cover these conditions, which would only subject them to about 120% of rated voltage for perhaps 10 seconds at the most. but then, why did that .1 cap fail...
perhaps i should be looking at a different part of the datasheet? the dV/dt Maximum Pulse Rise Time does show that the .1 cap would have a lower tolerance than the other lower capacitance values in the amp, at 1,700 Volts per microsecond. maybe the initial voltage pulse was just too quick? i do have a thermistor in the primary to limit inrush current, and it takes over a second for the B+ to climb above 400V, so this doesn't seem likely either...