Maybe not here so much, but in discussions I often say "I'd rather be PROVEN wrong than to GUESS I am right." Meaning that I would then KNOW the truth instead of assuming it. So I am all for experimentation. When we are all rationalizing parts of theory to fit our notions, then thought experiments are fair game. Obviously empirical data trumps ideas.
AS a thought exercise, if there is RF on the plate, would it not flow freely through a coupling cap? If there is an ambient RF near a stage (from where?) how exactly does the outer foil shield the cap? WOUld not any RF picked up on the outer foil flow freely through the cap to the other side? In other words, at RF, what is the impedance of the cap? Pretty much zero if the cap passes audio, I would think.
In my mind, the only difference I can come up with is the different freqs on either side of the cap. If the cap was a 500pf coupler, the signal on the input side of it would be fuller range - more bottom - than the downstream side. So if any signal were picked up by the outer foil if it was connected to the grid, then some of that bottom could crostalk past the cap. Seems like a tiny amount. But turned around, then that greater area outer foil would radiate more low end. I guess.
I don't see innards of amps all that dusty.
Of course I could be wrong, and I am typing far more words relatively speaking than my concern over the issue really merits, but I have the impression this is like some other things like skin effect, that people learn of then try to make fit into guitar amp theory.
I totally agree that outside foil matters in actual RF circuits, but unless there is some grounding issue at the input jack, I don't see RF problems in guitar amps. The exception is when unstable amps make their own "RF" like 50kHz or 100kHz.
AS a thought exercise, if there is RF on the plate, would it not flow freely through a coupling cap? If there is an ambient RF near a stage (from where?) how exactly does the outer foil shield the cap? WOUld not any RF picked up on the outer foil flow freely through the cap to the other side? In other words, at RF, what is the impedance of the cap? Pretty much zero if the cap passes audio, I would think.
In my mind, the only difference I can come up with is the different freqs on either side of the cap. If the cap was a 500pf coupler, the signal on the input side of it would be fuller range - more bottom - than the downstream side. So if any signal were picked up by the outer foil if it was connected to the grid, then some of that bottom could crostalk past the cap. Seems like a tiny amount. But turned around, then that greater area outer foil would radiate more low end. I guess.
I don't see innards of amps all that dusty.
Of course I could be wrong, and I am typing far more words relatively speaking than my concern over the issue really merits, but I have the impression this is like some other things like skin effect, that people learn of then try to make fit into guitar amp theory.
I totally agree that outside foil matters in actual RF circuits, but unless there is some grounding issue at the input jack, I don't see RF problems in guitar amps. The exception is when unstable amps make their own "RF" like 50kHz or 100kHz.
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