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LOL. Im crying on the inside and humping on the outside...Mike
So the last (tens?) metres to my equipment becomes important or maybe not
I suspect that loosely braided ac cables ( not tried yet) of many small copper or silverplated copper with a low(est)dielectric insulation ( Pe or teflon, or if you dare magnet wire with an airy cotton sock around them or cotton with a little beewax for naked wires) will sound better than the shielded ones.
metal shields have very high dielectric constants
hi John thx for the correctionswith ground you mean not the Neutral and the hot? The yellow green wire?
however a lot of gear do not use the earth connection
with respect to power cords yes magnet wire may crack if you bend it over and over so dont do it and i recomment another layer as a safety over it, paper, silk or cotton. I wil not dare to sell such a thing but in my own setup where i know "what is going on" i dont see a problem
i have a wire naked, now pure air is its mantle. the Electro magnetic force that travels with the current around the wire ( depending on voltage and Ampere) only how thick is "this" mantle?Example 1 i take a wire with a very thin insulation, which is smaller in diameter than the EM force mantle, So the air around this thin insulator is seen by the EM force as part of the mantle around the wire. and this air will influence positively the total dielectric property of this particular insulation. that is maybe why they suggest to rise yr cable from yr carpet with wire raisers? So I suppose the dielectric property will rise if you make this thin insulation layer thicker. That is why magnet wire has such low dielectrics?
Example 2 Now the second layer around this thin insulation is not air but a metallic woven fabric: the shieldOn one hand it introduces capacitance between metal wire and shield, but on the other hand?Will it adds a much more higher dielectric than the air in the first example and will lower the total dielectric of the total mantle as if a composiet mantle has its "own" dielectric?
I understood as a layman that electricity "following" a wire cannot be represented by the use of a metaphor of particles or water following a hollow tube, because a great part of the "electricity" follows the path alongside the wire.
so if you make those particles in the wrong metaphor tiny magnets all aligned, then you can imagine that outside this tube a magnetic field is traveling with the parts. The dielectric constant somehow interferes with the traveling of those outside tube properties of the electric current. A vacuum and less good, air interferes least, the higher the dielectric constantis of the insulation the more interference to those outside wire properties fo the electric current
Hi John thnx for yr undertandings but but impedance, capacitance and inductance affects in the same "logic envelope" "only" frequency and "loudness", no when listening to music?But dielectric constants have a far wider range to be heard, NOT only frequencythings like musicality, transparency, wetness/graininess placement, tone( not the same as freqs)my idea is that impedance, capacitance and inductance are not explaining enough for differences to be heard. I wonder if molecular resonance plays a role, other variablesmodernistic electrical science didn't explore as the electricity model seemed complete enoughSo my idea is ( for whatever reason) that metallic mantles will negatively affects the experience of sound if that is true, braided cables must sound somehow more musical, open and airy than shielded cables
but there are grey area's not completely illuminated by the assumptions EE logicrest upon yet.
John,as near as I can figure the power cord affects the dynamic impedance of the power supply that it connects to the mains. It has been my experience that a well designed, good sounding circuit always sounds markedly better with a low impedance wide bandwidth power supply. I think beginning to understanding the causes of the observed phenomena would require a dynamic test signal which would measure the bandwidth of the power cord as it is connected to the mains on one end and a power supply on the other end or at least a test setup with a power cord terminated on either end with the same impedance values as found under typical use conditions. Given the potential for multiple non-linearities at every step in the chain of a typical audio system and the presence of the human factor it's no small wonder that there is no agreement about how power cords should be designed or what power cord would sound good in a specific system. Scotty
Some useful data might be obtained by by someone with the appropriate test equipment and the time to undertake the testing.