Great video, I learned a lot! One thing that still irks me is when I see a schematic published/shared that just shows "2x 470uF". If it said, "2x Panasonic 470uF model XYZ", or "1000uF with < 0.1 ohm ESR" then that would be somewhat rational. But otherwise, surely there's a wide range of performance characteristics for both 470uF and 1000uF capacitors -- there must be 1000uF capacitors out there with a way better ESR than 2x some marginal 470uF capacitors. If the original designer looked at what was available in the catalogue and concluded that 2x 470uF was the way to go back in 1973, isn't it likely that what's in the catalogues has changed since then? I'd almost (but not quite) go so far as to say that this is a question of component procurement and selection at the time of production, not something that belongs on a timeless schematic. Stating a max ESR seems like a far better approach.
Or am I wrong, is there some sort of universal accurate standard for how much ESR a "decent normal" cap of a given voltage and capacitance has?