Audio Interconnect cable Performance - is Return Wire Diameter a Factor?
I was mucking around with interconnects and built a cable with an increased sized return wire. And i thought that this sounded better not worse than a similar cable without such a return wire.
Eichmann states that "The Ratio forces the return conductor to respond rapidly to signals being transmitted through the signal conductor, at the same time providing a balance of reactance between signal and return. This ensures that all frequencies andtheir harmonics are transmitted in a more perfect state. The result is cleaner signal transfer. Which translates to better sound quality."
The Eichmann explanation might sound at first a bit doublespeak though this in itself does not invalidate the overall idea and of an impact. Eichmann limited their patent to just the interconnect plug connector. But the ideas’ effect on sound, iftrue, is likely to be so for the interconnect wire architecture as well. That is having a larger diameter return wire compared to the signal wire results in a so called better sound. one commentator on an interconnect cable that implemented a larger
Why? I suppose we need to consider the whole circuit. That is the signal starting from the source travels to the preamp then the power amp then the speakers then starts a return journey back to the source.
Lots of people and manufacturers use coaxial cable as an interconnect cable wire and swear by the lower noise floor of these cables compared to similar grade/length twisted or untwisted versions. The coaxial cable return with it’s greater areacompared to the signal wire will have less resistance. And maybe this has an impact on coaxial interconnect performance. The same argument is true for multi braided interconnects as these usually employ a greater number of strands for the return than for
this is only a hypothesis - or less: a drift in imagination... sandcastles - and i’m not so sure that the arguments stack up. there are other explanations. That is for the signal wire in an interconnect cable you might want to minimise capacitancewhile for the return wire you might want to minimise resistance or maximise a velocity factor hence a larger diameter of the return wire.
I suppose my real interest here is should having an interconnect return wire with a larger diameter than the signal wire have theoretically a “better” sound, i.e. less noise, than an interconnect cable with wires of equal diameter - all otherthings being equal? And why?
Further would there be a “theoretical” benefit in having a separate return wire from just one point on each unit fanning out to a central contact point?
Another thought should there be a continuity between interconnect cables and within units with regard to wire material and fabrication between the source, pre and power amps? Would that reduce reflections?
Electricity in a wire, AC or DC, moves much faster than the "speed of light" - which is defined by its speed in a vacuum. Pop an electron into the system at one end, and that instant, one pops out at the other. The water that one puts in a pipe is notthe same water that comes out the other end (unless the pipe was empty initially - not possible with electrons in a wire). With AC current, it is entirely possible that no individual electron makes it down the entire length of the wire.
Electricity in a wire, AC or DC, moves much faster than the "speed of light" - which is defined by its speed in a vacuum. Pop an electron into the system at one end, and that instant, one pops out at the other. The water that one puts in a pipe is notthe same water that comes out the other end (unless the pipe was empty initially - not possible with electrons in a wire). With AC current, it is entirely possible that no individual electron makes it down the entire length of the wire.
If our Sun winked out of existence tomorrow, how long would it take for
our planet to cease circling where our Sun once was?
minor perturbations from the other objects in the former solar system.If our Sun winked out of existence tomorrow, how long would it take for
our planet to cease circling where our Sun once was?
That would be as soon as the gravity wave ceased - which would also be largely instantaneous. Objects in orbit are not truly "in orbit", but in Free Fall. The earth would travel in that direction on the arc that it was on when the sun went away - with
**Nothing (in this universe) can move faster than 'c'. Not light, not electrons, not gravity.
**Nothing (in this universe) can move faster than 'c'. Not light, not
electrons, not gravity.
Never stated nor implied that. What I stated is that as with water in a pipe, when water goes in at one end, water instantaneously comes out at the other end. But, IT IS NOT THE SAME WATER.
On 2020-12-07, Peter Wieck <peterw...@gmail.com> wrote:Before I get snarky: I was making an analogy. Water in a pipe to electrons in a wire. What goes in is not what comes out, even though what comes out is very nearly instantaneous to what goes in. Nowhere was I suggesting sound in water, signals in water,
**Nothing (in this universe) can move faster than 'c'. Not light, not
electrons, not gravity.
Never stated nor implied that. What I stated is that as with water in a pipe, when water goes in at one end, water instantaneously comes out at the other end. But, IT IS NOT THE SAME WATER.
The first and second sentences here are wrong.
The speed of water signal propagation is the speed of sound in water, which is
around 1400-1600m/s depending on temperature, salinity, etc. That is literally
the speed at which water molecules can push each other around; it is not "instantaneous".
Applicability of this argument to audio:
1. The speed of sound in water is about 4x the speed of sound in air. Therefore,
there is a major impedance mismatch at air/water boundaries, leading to sound reflection.
2. The speed of an electrical signal is finite (but very fast), so we can measure
and discover that it doesn't matter whether your speaker wires are the same length because you can't hear the timing difference for any reasonable difference in length. (Say, 1 meter vs 1000 meters -- you'll get differences in signal level before you get audible timing differences.)
-dsr-
Before I get snarky: I was making an analogy. Water in a pipe to electrons in a wire. What goes in is not what comes out, even though what comes out is very nearly instantaneous to what goes in. Nowhere was I suggesting sound in water, signals inwater, and/or so forth.
On 2020-12-07, Peter Wieck <peterwieck33@gmail.com> wrote:minor perturbations from the other objects in the former solar system.
If our Sun winked out of existence tomorrow, how long would it take for
our planet to cease circling where our Sun once was?
That would be as soon as the gravity wave ceased - which would also be largely instantaneous. Objects in orbit are not truly "in orbit", but in Free Fall. The earth would travel in that direction on the arc that it was on when the sun went away - with
Your first sentence is, again, wrong. All experiments in gravity propagation show that
it moves at 'c', which is to say, about 8 minutes between the Sun suddenly failing
to exist and the planet no longer falling towards it.
-dsr-
The typical patch-cord from an active pre-amp of modern design may carry as much as
twenty (20) Volts at some small fraction of an amp, and unless something is very wrong,
always AC. So, not many electrons (amps), but those few are moving REALLY fast at higher
frequencies.
If our Sun winked out of existence tomorrow, how long would it take forThat would be as soon as the gravity wave ceased - which would also be largely instantaneous.
our planet to cease circling where our Sun once was?
Nope, 100% wrong. It does not and CANNOT happen, in your words, "at that instant."
If you had a large supply of entangled particles, then you could have instantaneous
information transfer, what Einstein called "spooky action at a distance".
Nope, 100% wrong. It does not and CANNOT happen, in your words, "at that instant."
Dick Pierce
First of all, let's make sure that we agree on terms:
It is current that matters.
The typical patch-cord from an active pre-amp of modern design may carry
as much as twenty (20) Volts
at some small fraction of an amp,
So, not many electrons (amps),
The Dynaco PAT-5 biFet makes 15V @ 50MA +/- 5%
There is an Aktika (sp?) pre-amp that makes 20V @ 50MA +/- 5%
And there is a mod for the PAT-5 to get it to 42V @ 20MA +/- 5%
The reasoning for those superficially absurd voltages is headroom. And that is a long, difficult, and very nearly futile discussion mostly based on revealed religion.
And, that is AC voltage. Not DC - so those electrons are flying back and forth at whatever the audio frequency might be. Not departing for parts-unknown and in only one direction.
The Dynaco PAT-5 biFet makes 15V @ 50MA +/- 5%
There is an Aktika (sp?) pre-amp that makes 20V @ 50MA +/- 5%
And there is a mod for the PAT-5 to get it to 42V @ 20MA +/- 5%
The reasoning for those superficially absurd voltages is headroom.
And that is a long, difficult, and very nearly futile discussion mostly
based on revealed religion.
And, that is AC voltage. Not DC - so those electrons are flying back and forth
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