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This should be interesting:Loudspeaker cables and their effects
What is more, loudspeaker cables may be carrying 11 octaves of frequency range and not just the single frequency of an electrical supply, so what happens over the whole range of operation is of interest, and all frequencies must be passed as uniformly as possible.
Quote from: ctviggen on 14 Sep 2007, 10:32 amThis should be interesting:Loudspeaker cables and their effectsQuite. Thanks for the link.While most of it is reasonable, they messed up on the fundamentals of e/m theory. To wit, they don't talk correctly about inductance. I guess that should be expected, as they are audio guys and not physics types.I tried to register on their forum to outline their errors, but when I tried to submit, got a server busy message..sigh.Cheers, John
I'm sure we'd all like to see the corrections posted here.
Skin effect is the result of the creation of potential voltage loops within a solid conductor. When this happens, current goes toward the outside. Litz breaks that radial conduction path, this makes the current stay within the wire strand it's been in all along.
Hey John!Quote from: jneutron on 14 Sep 2007, 07:36 pmSkin effect is the result of the creation of potential voltage loops within a solid conductor. When this happens, current goes toward the outside. Litz breaks that radial conduction path, this makes the current stay within the wire strand it's been in all along.Quote from: Steve Eddy on 14 Sep 2007, 08:39 pmMmmm. That's not quite how I understand it.Let's consider a typical, radially arranged bundle of wire. In this configuration, even when the wires are twisted, they still retain the same radial position from end to end. And even if the individual wires are insulated, eddy currents should still be greater in the wires located toward the center of the bundle and the the signal current density should be higher in the conductors toward the outside of the bundle as frequency increases.Two effects come into play in the standard use of litz. Micro and macro effects.Remember, the pseudocurrents which are skin effect, are toroidally formed currents which go against the primary current of the bundle. These pseudocurrents in a bundle which can communicate strand to strand, set up the gradients which make the current tend towards the outside.With non random litz, there is no way for the current to jump to the outer conductors..in fact, the pseudocurrents cannot be established simply because there is no radial conductivity.Each conductor within the litz will suffer from macro effects, which can cause the current within every strand to redistribute, but each strand will not have the same current density redistribution. That will depend heavily on the position within the bundle. This is the effect which comes into play for hf transformers, where the higher magfields will cause higher dissipation in the wires.Quote from: Steve Eddy on 14 Sep 2007, 08:39 pmIt's my understanding that litz wire is woven in such a way so that on average, each individual wire occupies every position radially along the length. Yep. That is to prevent the macro effect of one wire being in the highfield vs others in lowfield. That prevents the individual strands from carrying different currents.Cheers, John
Mmmm. That's not quite how I understand it.Let's consider a typical, radially arranged bundle of wire. In this configuration, even when the wires are twisted, they still retain the same radial position from end to end. And even if the individual wires are insulated, eddy currents should still be greater in the wires located toward the center of the bundle and the the signal current density should be higher in the conductors toward the outside of the bundle as frequency increases.
It's my understanding that litz wire is woven in such a way so that on average, each individual wire occupies every position radially along the length.
Their statements are in blue..The first way to combat the resistance problem is to shorten the cable; halving the length of the cable will halve all the impedance components. Another way to halve the resistance would be to double the cross-section of the cable, but whilst this may be effective on the resistive part of the impedance, the increased spacing between the centres of the conductors will increase the inductance. The effect may therefore be beneficial at low frequencies but detrimental at high frequencies. Consider two #24awg wires that are uninsulated. Put them side by side, seperated by an insulator a millionth of an inch thick. That is as close as they can reasonably get. The inductance will have some value..Now, do the same with a pair of #12 wires...they will have the same inductance as the #24's. Do the same with two copper rods 1 inch in diameter, they will have the same inductance. The key point here, is the wire size is unimportant in the inductance equation.What matters is indeed the spacing, as was said..but it is the spacing in relation to the wire diameters.If you take a picture of the cross section of a wire pair that has L nH per foot, no matter what size you make that picture, the inductance remains the same. Scaling doesn't change it.Inductance can be calculated using the Terman equation. This is comprised of three parts...the first is the external inductance of the dipole field, which is proportional to the term: Log(D/d), where D is the wire spacing, and d is the wire diameter. As long as the ratio of diameter to distance remains the same, the total dipole field inductance will be exactly the same.It depends heavily on the insulation thickness which defines that ratio.
What did I miss?
Granted, it's been a while since my undergrad course in EM but, if I remember correctly skin effect was only relevant when discussing high frequencies (microwave frequencies and beyond). While there may be some degree of skin effect with audio signals, I'd be surprised if would produce an audible difference, especially if it were a blind listening test.