I certainly can't argue that. But in years gone by K, J and other alpha designations had to do with either the quality of the product or the percentage of accuracy. It's been since the 80's that I worked with such caps with mil-spec numbers like 5135K (guessing from vague memory) whereas other caps of the same F might have been designated as 5035J or something like that. This is part of the reason why I'm finding some confusion.I believe the value is in pF, K is 1000
I've been through my stock of caps in a box (purchased as sets) and have scanned through a bunch of scrap boards looking for the illusive values of 4.7µF and 10µF. Did not find anything closer than 1µF and 0.47µF. @MisterBill2 suggested
using an electrolytic cap of same value would be OK. But the issue of polarization raises some question as to whether that's actually an acceptable approach. It's been hundreds of years since I messed with Tri-Axial speakers with filter caps on them and I can't remember if I saw EC's or non-EC's. This is why I asked about series caps with Pos to Pos or Neg to Neg in series. As for voltage, the supply I have is 12 volts. Going through my junk I just found a 24VDC supply. The project says it runs on 8VDC to 24VDC. So I'd imagine going with a 35 or 50 volt cap should be well within tolerances.at the very low power level an electrolytic that is polarized should work very well.

