Originally posted by Alan0354
View Post
does play a part of it as a small fraction of an ohm will change a lot at the higher frequency range.
As I said I was surprised the skin depth calculation gives on 0.6mm at just 10KHz.
Human can feel to about 20KHz
Humans may be able to feel electricity at various levels of perception from DC up to megahertz. The (literal!!) skin effect forces the currents to the outside of humans like any conductor at high frequencies. So lighting strikes are often conducted solely through skin. I'd have to go look up the variation of human feeling with frequency.
so the current of the most of the important frequency components really flow on or close to the surface.
It is not the resistance of the cable, I think it's the inductance of the cable that has more effect.
Also think about the cross over, there is always a cap in series with the speaker, speaker has inductance, cable has inductance, both in series with the capacitor will make a series resonance circuit.
(1) The exact frequency of the resonances (there will likely be more than one) make a big difference on whether they can possibly affect audio.
(2) A resonant circuit's effect is highly dependent on any damping; a speaker itself is quite an energy-eater, so it may well over damp the resonance of the cable, crossover, etc. - or under damp it at some frequency. There is no substitute for knowing the details on an issue like this. This is why people have been trying to figure out equations and math to describe things for so long. It is well known that one horse can run faster than another horse. But WHICH ONE??? Details matter.
(3) For completion, crossovers contain inductors too. Whether the cable's capacitance/inductance is big enough to matter compared to the inductance/capacitance/resistance of the crossover and speaker can take the cable characteristics from important to uselessly tiny.
I heard one high end audiophile cable company use smaller insulated cable in parallel to make up a big cable. This make the most sense as this will give maximum surface area that you get lowest inductance and resistance.
But yes, getting around skin effect with multiple parallel wires is a technique that's quite well known and old in the radio community. The generic term is "Litz wire", for Litzendraht (I think. It's been awhile since I saw that spelled) Whether this matters or not depends on many, many other things than the wire.
Best is to use something like a 24 Gauge magnetic wires
and bundle they to make a big cable. 24 gauge is just small enough that there should have no skin effect problem.
I believe everything has a reason, not just because some guru said so.
Comment