![]() |
TCI Cobra interconnects against Chord Chameleon
In article , Dave Plowman (News)
wrote: In article , Eeyore wrote: You need to know the R, L and C of cable. It makes a complex filter. With the output impedance of a decent amp being 2 10ths of FA, the capacitance of any practical cable doesn't matter. This assumes the amp is stable into whatever the resulting load may be presented to its output terminals. Also that loading at ultrasonic frequencies has no other effect on its performance which may show up in the audio range. I'd expect that for a decently designed amplifier. But I am less confident it will apply for every design that people sell. :-) Nor should the inductance with a properly designed amp. Erm... the problem with cable impedance is that it is a series contribution. May not bother the amplifier, but can change the signal patterns at the load at the other end of the cable. Particularly with speakers that are essentially capacitive at HF. Some LS cables have inductances of the order of 1 microH/m or more. FWIW I've been measuring LS cables recently, and cables with inductances of the order of 0.5 microH/m seem to be more common than people might expect! :-) Slainte, Jim -- Change 'noise' to 'jcgl' if you wish to email me. Electronics http://www.st-and.ac.uk/~www_pa/Scot...o/electron.htm Armstrong Audio http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/Armstrong/armstrong.html Audio Misc http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/index.html |
TCI Cobra interconnects against Chord Chameleon
Eeyore wrote:
Does you car stereo sound better when you fill the tank with Shell ? Actually... yes. No, seriously. Bear with me. When I fill up at Shell with V-Power diesel the engine runs smoother and quieter than it does with supermarket special diesel. Which means I don't get that raspy sound coming up over the music when I accelerate (usually sideways) off a a roundabout. And no, it's not snake oil... it's diesel oil. :-P -- Squirrel Solutions Ltd Tel: (01453) 845735 http://www.squirrelsolutions.co.uk/ Fax: (01453) 843773 Registered in England: 05877408 |
TCI Cobra interconnects against Chord Chameleon
In article ,
Eeyore wrote: Does anyone make a high quality single channel active speaker? God Yes ! Ans were I not so astonished you asked I'd answer right now ! I know of several single unit powered speakers - but I'd not describe them as high quality. They're simply convenient for stand alone use in a pro environment. -- *42.7% of statistics are made up. Sorry, that should read 47.2% * Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
TCI Cobra interconnects against Chord Chameleon
Glenn Richards wrote: Eeyore wrote: Does you car stereo sound better when you fill the tank with Shell ? Actually... yes. No, seriously. Bear with me. When I fill up at Shell with V-Power diesel the engine runs smoother and quieter than it does with supermarket special diesel. Which means I don't get that raspy sound coming up over the music when I accelerate (usually sideways) off a a roundabout. And no, it's not snake oil... it's diesel oil. :-P Well fancy that ! Who'd have guessed it ? You ought to write in to the car audio ragazines. Graham |
TCI Cobra interconnects against Chord Chameleon
"Dave Plowman (News)" wrote: Eeyore wrote: Does anyone make a high quality single channel active speaker? God Yes ! Ans were I not so astonished you asked I'd answer right now ! I know of several single unit powered speakers - but I'd not describe them as high quality. They're simply convenient for stand alone use in a pro environment. What level are you thinking at ? KRKs seem to be very well though of at present. I think they do powered versions. Graham |
TCI Cobra interconnects against Chord Chameleon
"Dave Plowman (News)" wrote: Eeyore wrote: Does anyone make a high quality single channel active speaker? God Yes ! Ans were I not so astonished you asked I'd answer right now ! I know of several single unit powered speakers - but I'd not describe them as high quality. They're simply convenient for stand alone use in a pro environment. Oh and Genelec are still around. http://www.genelec.com/ and here's the KRK site. http://www.krksys.com/ PMCs are LOVELY. Not sure if they do powered models. http://www.pmc-speakers.com/ Graham |
TCI Cobra interconnects against Chord Chameleon
On 2008-07-14, Jim Lesurf wrote:
In article , Dave Plowman (News) wrote: In article , Eeyore wrote: You need to know the R, L and C of cable. It makes a complex filter. With the output impedance of a decent amp being 2 10ths of FA, the capacitance of any practical cable doesn't matter. This assumes the amp is stable into whatever the resulting load may be presented to its output terminals. Also that loading at ultrasonic frequencies has no other effect on its performance which may show up in the audio range. I'd expect that for a decently designed amplifier. But I am less confident it will apply for every design that people sell. :-) Nor should the inductance with a properly designed amp. Erm... the problem with cable impedance is that it is a series contribution. May not bother the amplifier, but can change the signal patterns at the load at the other end of the cable. Particularly with speakers that are essentially capacitive at HF. Some LS cables have inductances of the order of 1 microH/m or more. FWIW I've been measuring LS cables recently, and cables with inductances of the order of 0.5 microH/m seem to be more common than people might expect! :-) From some of my amp-cable-speaker modelling (using GNUCAP): Belden 9718 12 AWG: R = 10.8 mOhms/metre; C = 72.2 pF/metre; L = 755 nH/metre Maplin's "Shark 12 Gauge" (it's actually much beefier than 12 AWG): R = 4.8 mOhms/metre; C = 59.6 pF/metre; L = 660 nH/metre The Belden is from manufacturer specs (I think). The "Shark" is calculated by me from the actual cable's geometry. Both of these show a *small* high treble droop across the load, with 5 metres connected to a complex load modelled on my own rather benign 'speakers. It's a fairly broad band droop so it's just concievable it might be audible to a good, young set of ears (but not mine, I think). Paralleled cat 5 has much lower inductance (at the expense of a lot more capacitance) and is very good in the high treble. (At least as far as GNUCAP calculates - the real world is often different.) -- John Phillips |
TCI Cobra interconnects against Chord Chameleon
John Phillips wrote:
On 2008-07-14, Jim Lesurf wrote: In article , Dave Plowman (News) wrote: In article , Eeyore wrote: You need to know the R, L and C of cable. It makes a complex filter. With the output impedance of a decent amp being 2 10ths of FA, the capacitance of any practical cable doesn't matter. This assumes the amp is stable into whatever the resulting load may be presented to its output terminals. Also that loading at ultrasonic frequencies has no other effect on its performance which may show up in the audio range. I'd expect that for a decently designed amplifier. But I am less confident it will apply for every design that people sell. :-) Nor should the inductance with a properly designed amp. Erm... the problem with cable impedance is that it is a series contribution. May not bother the amplifier, but can change the signal patterns at the load at the other end of the cable. Particularly with speakers that are essentially capacitive at HF. Some LS cables have inductances of the order of 1 microH/m or more. FWIW I've been measuring LS cables recently, and cables with inductances of the order of 0.5 microH/m seem to be more common than people might expect! :-) From some of my amp-cable-speaker modelling (using GNUCAP): Belden 9718 12 AWG: R = 10.8 mOhms/metre; C = 72.2 pF/metre; L = 755 nH/metre Maplin's "Shark 12 Gauge" (it's actually much beefier than 12 AWG): R = 4.8 mOhms/metre; C = 59.6 pF/metre; L = 660 nH/metre The Belden is from manufacturer specs (I think). The "Shark" is calculated by me from the actual cable's geometry. Both of these show a *small* high treble droop across the load, with 5 metres connected to a complex load modelled on my own rather benign 'speakers. It's a fairly broad band droop so it's just concievable it might be audible to a good, young set of ears (but not mine, I think). Paralleled cat 5 has much lower inductance (at the expense of a lot more capacitance) and is very good in the high treble. (At least as far as GNUCAP calculates - the real world is often different.) As ever with cables, what determines the response is the square root of the ratio of the inductance to the capacitance. It matter nothing what each is individually. The closer you can get that figure to 8, the flatter the speaker response will be. d |
TCI Cobra interconnects against Chord Chameleon
Don Pearce wrote:
As ever with cables, what determines the response is the square root of the ratio of the inductance to the capacitance. It matter nothing what each is individually. The closer you can get that figure to 8, the flatter the speaker response will be. So figure-8 cable is the best sort. :-) -- Eiron. |
TCI Cobra interconnects against Chord Chameleon
Eiron wrote:
Don Pearce wrote: As ever with cables, what determines the response is the square root of the ratio of the inductance to the capacitance. It matter nothing what each is individually. The closer you can get that figure to 8, the flatter the speaker response will be. So figure-8 cable is the best sort. :-) Ta-Daaa! d |
All times are GMT. The time now is 04:27 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
SEO by vBSEO 3.0.0
Copyright ©2004-2006 AudioBanter.co.uk