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Jim Lesurf Criminal Audiophool Facillitator
Phil Allison wrote: "Jim Lesurf Criminal Audiophool Facillitator " I've just put up a new webpage that provides some measurements on the properties of a variety of loudspeaker cables. The page is at http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/HFN/Cables3/TakeTheLead.html It is an expanded version of the article published in 'Hi Fi News' a few months ago. ** Dear UKRA readers, the religious among us can take some comfort from the fact that *SATAN* is currently preparing a special blast furnace in HELL ready to take the putrid soul of one " Jim Leserf " any time soon. SATAN is very proud of this particular, asinine pommy ****head for spreading chaos and confusion among the masses. So he deserves a special reward. Burn you ****ing *******, burn. .... Phil You have my total support. Graham -- due to the hugely increased level of spam please make the obvious adjustment to my email address |
New webpage on loudspeaker cables
John Phillips wrote: On 2009-08-07, Don Pearce wrote: On Fri, 07 Aug 2009 09:10:40 +0100, Jim Lesurf wrote: Hi, I've just put up a new webpage that provides some measurements on the properties of a variety of loudspeaker cables. The page is at http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/HFN/Cables3/TakeTheLead.html It is an expanded version of the article published in 'Hi Fi News' a few months ago. No conclusions section there, but maybe as follows? 1. If you open circuit the cable at the loudspeaker end, it is better if the cable is somewhat lossy, as this will prevent the quarter wave Mod Z dropping to too low (potentially damaging) a value. Alternatively, perhaps, that a well-designed amplifier will have about 2 uH of good quality inductance in series with its output to avoid such a case becoming damaging? Funny, that's very similar to the value I use. And it'll have a series R-C to ground to stabilise the load the amp 'sees'. This technique has been known for many decades. It is even used in long line-level drivers. Graham -- due to the hugely increased level of spam please make the obvious adjustment to my email address |
New webpage on loudspeaker cables
Jim Lesurf wrote: In general, cable losses will reduce the amplitude in the presented impdance changes with frequency in the RF region. How good are your ears at 1MHz ? Graham -- due to the hugely increased level of spam please make the obvious adjustment to my email address |
New webpage on loudspeaker cables
On Fri, 07 Aug 2009 17:31:43 +0100, Eeyore wrote:
Jim Lesurf wrote: Hi, I've just put up a new webpage that provides some measurements on the properties of a variety of loudspeaker cables. The page is at http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/HFN/Cables3/TakeTheLead.html It is an expanded version of the article published in 'Hi Fi News' a few months ago. What IDIOT thinks the reactance at 30 MEGAHERTZ has any influence on the listening experience. And since when ( Fig 1 for example ) do you run a cable open or shorted as a valid test ? WHAT A COMPLETE HEAP OF MINDLESS JUNK ! You should be ashamed of yourself and run some REAL models. I'm unsure about drawing any conclusions from graphs that start at 5x the accepted maximum audible frequency. I hope Jim has included tests on VHF coax as speaker leads too - it makes as much sense to me... ;-) *If* your amp has much output above 100kHz then it is faulty and needs looking at - seriously. It isn't allowed to be a radio transmitter by law and 148kHz upwards interferes with the LW band! :-) -- Mick (Working in a M$-free zone!) Web: http://www.nascom.info Filtering everything posted from googlegroups to kill spam. |
New webpage on loudspeaker cables
Jim Lesurf wrote:
Hi, I've just put up a new webpage that provides some measurements on the properties of a variety of loudspeaker cables. The page is at http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/HFN/Cables3/TakeTheLead.html It is an expanded version of the article published in 'Hi Fi News' a few months ago. Slainte, Jim FWIW it means very little to me. You seem to assume a correlation between frequency, resistance and sound. Perhaps a paragraph or two on what you might expect any measured result in the context of your measurments to mean? Rob |
New webpage on loudspeaker cables
On Fri, 07 Aug 2009 17:31:43 +0100, Eeyore
wrote: Jim Lesurf wrote: Hi, I've just put up a new webpage that provides some measurements on the properties of a variety of loudspeaker cables. The page is at http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/HFN/Cables3/TakeTheLead.html It is an expanded version of the article published in 'Hi Fi News' a few months ago. What IDIOT thinks the reactance at 30 MEGAHERTZ has any influence on the listening experience. And since when ( Fig 1 for example ) do you run a cable open or shorted as a valid test ? WHAT A COMPLETE HEAP OF MINDLESS JUNK ! You should be ashamed of yourself and run some REAL models. Graham Ever heard the term "Unconditionally stable" in reference to an amplifier? Yes, I thought you had. What that means is that it will operate without oscillation into any combination of reactive and resistive load (over the entire Smith chart). The reason why Naim amplifiers don't is that they failed to consider exactly this problem in their design. If they had just used Figure 1 (which you deride) they might have made an acceptable product. In my years of design I discovered something important. It doesn't matter what is the maximum frequency you intend to put through something. Your design must encompass the maximum frequency at which the active devices can produce gain (something like Ft). It is all too easy to end up with an audio amplifier which is so marginally stable at 30MHz that it can oscillate into some loads. When that happens, yes, there will be sonic consequences. So, Graham, have a bit of a rethink, I suggest. d |
New webpage on loudspeaker cables
In message , mick
writes On Fri, 07 Aug 2009 17:31:43 +0100, Eeyore wrote: Jim Lesurf wrote: Hi, I've just put up a new webpage that provides some measurements on the properties of a variety of loudspeaker cables. The page is at http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/HFN/Cables3/TakeTheLead.html It is an expanded version of the article published in 'Hi Fi News' a few months ago. What IDIOT thinks the reactance at 30 MEGAHERTZ has any influence on the listening experience. And since when ( Fig 1 for example ) do you run a cable open or shorted as a valid test ? WHAT A COMPLETE HEAP OF MINDLESS JUNK ! You should be ashamed of yourself and run some REAL models. I'm unsure about drawing any conclusions from graphs that start at 5x the accepted maximum audible frequency. I hope Jim has included tests on VHF coax as speaker leads too - it makes as much sense to me... ;-) *If* your amp has much output above 100kHz then it is faulty and needs looking at - seriously. It isn't allowed to be a radio transmitter by law and 148kHz upwards interferes with the LW band! :-) An audio amplifier with a frequency response well into the RF region will not, itself, transmit RF signals (apart from a little low-level wideband noise). Of course, it will be a different matter if the effects of the load impedance (seen by the amplifier) were to cause instability, and cause the amplifier to oscillate. Such oscillations could occur in the RF region and, even if the oscillation itself was 'sub-RF', there could be substantial levels of RF harmonics. -- Ian |
New webpage on loudspeaker cables
In article , Eeyore
wrote: Jim Lesurf wrote: Hi, I've just put up a new webpage that provides some measurements on the properties of a variety of loudspeaker cables. The page is at http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/HFN/Cables3/TakeTheLead.html It is an expanded version of the article published in 'Hi Fi News' a few months ago. What IDIOT thinks the reactance at 30 MEGAHERTZ has any influence on the listening experience. Perhaps those who have observed more than one audio power amp oscillating at RF as a result of the loading presented to it, and the amp not being unconditionally stable. (Yes, including commercial designs.) Plus perhaps having observed changes in the audio-band distortion behaviour as a result of loading above the audible range. And since when ( Fig 1 for example ) do you run a cable open or shorted as a valid test ? Surprised you don't understand that as I understand you are an engineer, although I guess you may be unfamiliar with the methods that RF and microwave engineering might employ for such things. The measurements into an open and a short allow you to determine the cable's complex impedance and propagation properties as a function of frequency. They also give you some indication of the size of any impedance swings the amp will experience into unpredicted loads. In essence at each frequency the two complex values for the presented impedance allow you to work out the required values for the cable. WHAT A COMPLETE HEAP OF MINDLESS JUNK ! You should be ashamed of yourself and run some REAL models. Alternatively, you could be embarassed by attacking in a way that shows that your objections are based on not pausing first to understand the reasons for the measurements. :-) Slainte, Jim -- Please use the address on the audiomisc page 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 |
New webpage on loudspeaker cables
In article , Eeyore
wrote: John Phillips wrote: Alternatively, perhaps, that a well-designed amplifier will have about 2 uH of good quality inductance in series with its output to avoid such a case becoming damaging? Funny, that's very similar to the value I use. And it'll have a series R-C to ground to stabilise the load the amp 'sees'. This technique has been known for many decades. Yes. I have always done the same. However some designers don't, and it is possible for people to choose incorrect values, or use an inductor whose self-resonance is too low in frequency. Slainte, Jim -- Please use the address on the audiomisc page 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 |
New webpage on loudspeaker cables
In article , Eeyore
wrote: Jim Lesurf wrote: In general, cable losses will reduce the amplitude in the presented impdance changes with frequency in the RF region. How good are your ears at 1MHz ? Afraid I can't hear 1MHz. But I have heard - and measured - a change in amplifier performance in cases where the amp has been producing bursts of oscillations at such frequencies with loads it did not like at RF. As before, I am quite surprised that someone who I thought had designed and tested amp may not have encountered this. Slainte, Jim -- Please use the address on the audiomisc page 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 |
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