Higher Impedance means more turns of lighter guage wire - so lighter coil...maybe / maybe not.
for a given winding length, thinner wire means less copper, but you can put more turns in same space, so on first sight it "looks" like it might even out.
But turns-per-inch is a linear function (it depends on diameter), while weight-per-inch is exponential (it depends on the square of diameter).
A practical example:
we have a coil with, say, 100 turns and it weighs 2 grams.
Now we halve diameter, and of course, now can fit 200 turns.
One turn will have same length as before, diameter will be half, section will be 1/4 and of course, weight will also be 1/4 as before.
So we have twice as many turns as before , twice the wire length, but 1/4 the weight-per-turn, so 2X(turns)/4X(w.p.t.)=1/2 original weight = 1 gram .
Putting it another way: VC resistance varies with the *cube* of wire diameter
As in: half diameter means 2X as many turns and 4X as much resistance per turn=2X x 4X=8X=2^3=2 cubed.
Remember I design and make my own voice coils, both for own use and servicing, so this is "everyday stuff" for me.
When I started on this job I thought I would need tons of different wire sizes; later I noticed a few sizes let me duplicate a lot of commercial coils.
My last project is cloning (really I'm designing it on my own, rather than mindless copying) the weird Ampeg 32 ohms 10" woofer ..... and I'm finding it *much* easier than the "monster" I imagined.
I originally thought it might need a 4 layer coil for such a high impedance but no, it came out to be a very reasonable 2 layer one.
Which matches what I hear; a 4 layer coil is muddy (that's why it's used in those horrible car woofers) while the old Ampeg 8x10" (I'm trying to catch the '69 to '72 "Alnico sound") were bright and punchy.
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