Teiki, No worries about condos, I understood you just missed it
I have just finished putting all the mundorf supreme in place and I would like to share my experiences. It has not been easy to put all mundurf in place.

Actually this is almost an impossibility if you want to keep the sheilding metal cover over the dac. The same cover is also the base and fixing point for the “metal tubes” surrounding the 6 tubes. There just isn’t enough space.
I removed the 8 wima mkp10 3,3 uf. Then I discovered that they have been soldered in a quite complex way as some of them also are connected on the top side of the circuit board. This is just one aspect.
The legs of the mundorfs fits extremely tight into the ex wima wholes. And the mundorf are so heavy (and you move them a lot when you try to turn the board in the very narrow space, I didn’t want to remove the fine wires that goes from the circuit board to the four RCA outputs, so the board was partially fixed by these short wires in the cd doing all work) that I actually ruined the thin copper layer on the circuit board in two places. I had to save the situation by making extra wires for the mundorf to be soldered directly on new places on the circuit.
This is only part of the problem….
I had to put isolation on all mundorf legs. I didn’t want to make the legs longer as this means it is more connections and less short way for the signal to travel. But this also means that when you solder the mundorfs you have to choices:
1) put them in without the shielding metal covering the dac and the anti vibrating metal tubes will not be there any more. When you have soldered the mundurfs there is no way to apply the metal cover,
2) put on the metal cover and then solder all mundorfs, This means that the metal cover is never to be removed again. This also means that it is very difficult when all work is done to fix the whole circuit board to the cd in the bottom because normally you first screw the circuit board into the cd bottom and then on top of these screws with 2 cm distance you screw new screws INTO the first ones (it has a whole in the mittle) to fix the metal cover. There is in the end very little space for the fingers to be able to turn the bottom screw (from the side! Actually the bottom screw is in the mittle, where the 2 cm distance to the top metal cover is, six or eight sided), but you can do it with a lot of patience. A special tool would indeed help this.
In the end my recommendation would be to maybe (depending on patience…) to skip the metal cover and also to remove the circuitboard completely from the cd when working. This means desolder the wires for the RCA outputs. If the circuit board is free from the cd there is less forces that pushes the heavy mundorfs when you turn the board and less chans that they destroy the thin copper layer on the circuit board!
I was finished very late yesterday so I couldn’t listen to the result (I heared on very low volyme that it sounded OK but my wife complained that it was late with completely not understanding for my impatience

).
But the first time I thought I was finished there was something very wrong with the sound. I opened the cd and looked under the circuit board (took a lot of time to remove it due to the almost impossibility to turn the “lower” screws). I then saw that around one soldering the thin copper of the circuit was destroyed by the force of the mundorf when I tried to squeeze everything down.
Just one more thing. One of the "four row" mundorfs nearest the cd front must be placed in a different place than in the row. There is not enough space. I made longer legs for one mundorf and put it in the space between the cd front and the "three mundorf row"(placed where the old wimas where).
Pictures will follow and ofcourse all listening impressions. I put the cd to repeat yeasterday!