I recall hearing that the reason speaker cables aren't shielded is because the shielding may drive the power amp into oscillation. What's the technical explanation behind this?
Thanks for your help.
Russ
Some speaker cables
are shielded ... however, the shield will always be connected to the 'black' BPs on the amp - either because the speaker cable is coaxial (so the shield is actually part of the signal path) or if the speaker cable is twinax (ie. a pair of signal wires
underneath a shield), the shield needs to be connected at the amp end to be effective as a shield.
The shield will increase the capacitative load of the speaker cables on the amp ... and some amps become unstable (and go into oscillation) with a high capacitative load.
If you think your speaker cables are picking up RFI (and so need to be shielded), I would suggest it is better to remove the RFI some other way - like by using a parallel cap of, say, 1nF, across the speaker BPs.
If the cable has a woven or foil shield but the shield or drain wire is not connected to either the amp or speakers, can that still cause a problem?
In that case, I don't think the braided/foil shield will be very effective.
Regards,
Andy