The full wave rectification period between charge deposits at 60 Hz is 8.333 milliseconds by the way. 1/60 = 16.666 milliseconds and there are 2 charge periods with full wave rectification (one for the positive half of the AC cycle and one for the negative half) leading to the charge deposit on the caps every 8.333 milliseconds. One of the advantages of larger caps is the ripple reduction that they afford, esp at higher frequencies which means the amp has a better chance of rejecting these input disturbances given the power supply rejection ratio inherent to the amp. The biggest advantage I have seen is replacing OLD dried out caps with NEW vital caps. Modern caps are generally made better and have much lower ESR than the old ones used 30+ years ago. This help in the high frequency rejection department helps the amp out in the area that it can least defend itself.