@kijanki Not to be argumentative, this is more for me to be informed. First, I've never added capacitance to a switching supply and This is just not how I understand inductance in relation to a power supply cap.
Inductance would be creating a magnetic field, yet As the capacitor charges, the magnetic field does not remain static. This results in electromagnetic waves which radiate energy away. So the magnetic field dissipates. The cap itself is not inductive.
So, I can see faulty, weak or under rated rectifiers. Maybe if you flipped the switch at the exact instance when your ac was hitting its peak in the sine wave.
Again, I've done this a bunch.... The first time was in 1980. Parasound built a chipped amp around a Sanken STK084... I called Dick Schram and he sent me 2 circuit boards, I ended up using an STK086, put higher grade parts in it. His amp had 4 - 6800 mfd caps in it. I used a separate supply case with 12 - 6800mfd caps. That was my first foray into increasing capacitance and wow, what a difference that it made.
Inductance would be creating a magnetic field, yet As the capacitor charges, the magnetic field does not remain static. This results in electromagnetic waves which radiate energy away. So the magnetic field dissipates. The cap itself is not inductive.
So, I can see faulty, weak or under rated rectifiers. Maybe if you flipped the switch at the exact instance when your ac was hitting its peak in the sine wave.
Again, I've done this a bunch.... The first time was in 1980. Parasound built a chipped amp around a Sanken STK084... I called Dick Schram and he sent me 2 circuit boards, I ended up using an STK086, put higher grade parts in it. His amp had 4 - 6800 mfd caps in it. I used a separate supply case with 12 - 6800mfd caps. That was my first foray into increasing capacitance and wow, what a difference that it made.