I'm testing coupling caps for tone and 1 of the caps is a SoZo blue molded cap. It sounded thin compared to other caps I'm testing.
On the SoZo web site 1 of the things he say's is;
"It will take up to 100 hours of break in for the capacitor to operate to its full potential. The dielectric will polarize and develop a pattern creating a clearer, full frequency sound."So I talked with a friend from church today that's a chemistry PHD who worked for chemical companies over the years and taught college. He also plays a little guitar and has played with electronics since he was a kid, he dad was a Ham and started to teach him about tube stuff.
Anyway he said all polymers have so many parts per million of metals in them. He said he worked on projects where they were researching changing the strength of polymers by putting a dc charge on them and adding some heat to realign the PPM metals random charges. Then they had to let the polymer cool under a controlled environment. If done right the PPM metals would stay aligned.
So he said it could be true about breaking in CC to change their tone. He also said the cap might need some heat for the change to happen. Said maybe in a tube amp with signal flowing through the circuit the CC might heat up a little?
I brought up about breaking in new speakers using a 6.3v PT and asked if that might work for the CC's. He said to just connect the CC across the 2/6.3v secondary wires and leave it for a day or so and then test it for any sound change on my bread board rig.
He said it might break in in less time because of the low frequency applied to the cap. But is it enough signal flowing through the cap this way?
Caps are used across AC lines as filters so I think it's safe?
Would be way less expensive then running the cap in an amp with a CD player looped into the input for 100 hours.
Any thoughts?

I don't want to burn down the house.