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Most passive crossover networks have no shielded components. Don't know why you would shield a resistor, with all the unshielded wires in and near the crossover.
Their web page says to connect to the crossover negative. Not all amps have this connected to ground though.I've never heard of individually shielded resistors.
Imagine a resistor directly in front of a tweeter that is shunted to ground. Not only did you just cut the volume of the tweeter, you also dropped impedence of the circuit (which could make for a very unhappy amp) Unless you have a decent handle on what's happening with the crossover circuit, I can't imagine that grounding each resistor is a good thing.
Doubtful that the shield does anything meaningful in any realistic situation.Just another audiophile misunderstanding.
This resistor is in the signal path, not in a shunt position. The shield wire that is attached to these Path Audio resistors are only used as a shield when connected to the ground portion of the crossover. It is not connected in any way to the other 2 leads that are used in the resistor section.
Joatmon, I'd just ground the shield and never, ever bring this up again.
Note: If your amps are full differential balanced like My Pass XA60.8, DO NOT connect the ground lead wire to the neg(-) since it has signal and is not to be ever connected to ground all you will be doing is introducing signal (noise) to the shield, and that's counterproductive.