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no Dave, it goes against laws of physics, Ohm's to be exact. My Lord, 'audiophools' are indeed a weird bunch !
None in any of the FRs, but some seriously big ones in the 2 WAW that we have done passive XOs.No inductors at all gives some latitude to how resistive the wire is. The 1st online calculator i found suggested my wire has 0.18Ω R.I am currently using a PP EL84 triode amp, but it was just put in so we could demo the Pass ACA which have been in system for probably 10 months.A related subjecy it damping factor, most have no real understanding of the effects of changing output impedance. Optimum is very dependent of the speakers used — and there are a growing number of them that kak if the output impedance is too low (damping factor too high).dave
Ah, no it does not twitch54. Whether Dave uses a higher output impedance (Z) amplifier or uses wire of higher dc resistance, they are basically interchangeable. The wire's inductive reactance (XL) is relatively constant regardless of gauge (single wire); so if one uses a thevenin equivalent circuit to analyze the circuit, the Rdc can either be placed in the amplifier's output itself, or in the wire itself. I hope you will reconsider your comments.steve
Unless we intend to discuss the science/methodology etc, shouldn't this be in the Path of Least Resistance forum?
OK, gotcha , therefore....overall 'system dependent' and for that your saying Ohm's Law has no bearing ?
I could go on and on, but any decent speaker wire at audio frequencies looks like a simple resistance. You do need enough "girth" to keep from killing damping factor, assuming your amps have respectably low output impedance across the audio band (hint: most don't). Science is the key to understanding wire.
Single Single Single 5 parallel 18 ga. 13 ga. 11 ga. 18 ga. parallel wires.0325 .0104 .0066 .0065 DC resistance2410 nh 2232 nh 2162 nh 482 nh Inductance.30 ohms .28 ohms .27 ohms .06 ohms Inductive reactance 20khzI kept the capacitance to minimal, near zero which is almost always good (never say always). So while the 5 parallel 18 gauge wires equate to an 11 gauge wire in DC resistance, the inductive reactance is only 1/4.5th that of the 11 gauge wire.
Not exactly. It may be that the optimum damping factor is not the highest. We also wish to consider the highs and low inductance.
Note that an amplifier's output impedance is NOT the same animal as speaker wire impedance. NOT interchangeable!
Simply put, lower damping factor means less control over the speaker.
Regarding inductance, how much is acceptable to you as far as speaker wire goes, and how do you calculate that? Thanks.
Not a valid generalization. Depending on the box and the driver in the box, too high a damping factor can overdamp the driver.Having lived with a variable transimpedance amp (output impedance controllable from near zero to near infinity), each speaker we tried had a different optimal setting.dave
I am saying a couple of things. First I apologize if I came off strong Dave (twitch54). I have just heard "breaking Physics" too many times on other forums.
LOL Steve, no apologies needed, I am not one of those 'thin skinned' forum types. Many, if not most here are more techno-savvy than myself. I just couldn't by into a generalized statement of a 24ga piece of wire improving ones speaker connection to amplifier without supporting info. Regardless, my Pass Labs X260.8's driving my Revel Studio 2's will never be subject to such.keep the dialogue going, I'm enjoying the read.