In article , Rob
wrote:
Jim Lesurf wrote:
FWIW it means very little to me. You seem to assume a correlation
between frequency, resistance and sound.
Not sure what you mean, I'm afraid.
There's a relationship between three things: frequency and resistance
(the things you plot) and sound.
All the plots show relationships between frequency and apparent load
'resistance' (actually magnitude of impedance). But that isn't directly
related to 'sound' as such.
If one of the things change, another one will change ('correlation'). On
further reading you suggest a relationship between frequency, resistance
and risk.
As above. Sharp/deep dips in the 'resistance' as you change frequency tend
to give more 'risk' that the amplifier will be affected in a significant
manner. But this isn't a simple relationship with 'risk' as that depends on
'risk of what' and choice of amp, etc. Decent amplifier designs will be
essentially unaffected by all this. But some amps might be unhappy.
Perhaps a paragraph or two on what you might expect any measured
result in the context of your measurments to mean?
The measurements and results serve two purposes.
1) The size of the peaks and dips in impedance will vary with the
choice of cable and end-load (speaker). Using 'open' and 'short' means
loads with impedances as high and low as you can get compared with the
cable impedance. So you can expect the results to give you a guide to
which cables give the highest or lowest peaks/dips for real-world
loads. Hence the results give a sign of which cables would be more
risky with amplifiers that are not unconditionally stable, or whose
behaviour can be upset by RF resonances, etc. In particular, sharp
dips down to very low impedance can be bad news for a poor amplifier.
Hence useful as a warning.
Ah, OK, good. But is it *really* risky for any amplifier that doesn't
carry a cable recommendation tag? By risk I assume possibility of
component failure.
It is certainly possible for an amplifier to exhibit uncontrolled RF
oscillations, and for those to then damage the amplifier. Possibly also the
speaker. But I can't tell you any value for the 'risk' of this happening as
it would depend on things we don't know. More likely is that the audio
behaviour may be affected without the amp failing.
Again, well designed amplifiers aren't at any 'risk'. If the designer knew
what he was doing they will be stable into any load.
[snip]
It'd be nice, although I expect quite difficult, if you could explain
how these effects could influence sound.
Again, depends on the circumstances. High cable series impedance will alter
the frequency response in ways that depend on your choice of speaker.
High cable shunt capacitance may affect response if the amp has a high
output impedance (very low 'damping factor').
But the details will depend on the specific case. The alterations may be
too small to be bothered with, or not...
There are a couple of follow-on articles, that do look at this
further, and include simple techniques - like the use of a series
inductor and 'zobel' on the amp to help protect it against (1). That
is a method I've always used as it works neatly. But there are
commercial amplifier designs that *don't* do this, so are exposed to
RF loading by the cable and speaker.
Sounds daft. Do you know which amplifiers?
I can't comment on any current or recent commercial designs as I've not
measured them, and reviews generally ignore this area. So no data. I think
it likely that most (indeed almost all) are fine as this should be a known
problem, and engineers determined how to fix it decades ago. Maybe they are
all fine. But... no data.
However I do tend to get an uneasy feeling when reviews ignore issues like
this for decades. It can mean eyes are not on the ball and problems
familiar to past generations of engineers may end up in new designs because
no-one is alert. I confess I do wonder when I see some of the more 'quirky'
designs sold at high prices that have all kinds of of characteristics.
I can only say that I've personally seen such effects in amps many years
ago. e.g. in the Naim amps of some decades ago. It is a common problem with
experimental designs which the designer then has to iron out.
The problem here is that it can make good sense to choose loudspeaker
cables with very low series resistance and inductance, but that this means
high capacitance with minimal damping losses, and unless the amplifier is
happy with this there may be drawbacks.
In our universe, the product of series inductance and shunt capacitance for
cables is limited by the speed of light. Lowering one tends to shove up the
other. To avoid this, invent warp drive, or use a wormhole in space for the
cable. ...or just keep down the length of cable needed. :-)
Slainte,
Jim
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