Empirical Audio said:
Gene and I have already had an email exchange on this, but I felt the need to clarify something. Namely that the inductance measurement that I made was off by 80% from Gene's measurement. The explanation is that the Ferrite terminators were not removed from the cable for this measurement. The cable itself has much lower inductance than Gene measured. Only the Goertz is lower than the Clarity7. Just as a Zoebel network should be removed before the measurements, the ferrites should have been removed as well.
For the purposes of measuring the wire by itself, yes, you are correct. However, you are not selling just the wire, but a product..comprised of specific elements..the measurements as they stand give the numbers which will be seen in the end application.
It is good, however, to point out that the inductance is different as a result of the ferrite..as you consider the ferrite to be of use to the consumer..I do not argue the utility of it, just the confusion caused by spec'ing a cable in a way that is not consistent with what you are selling..
I think of it this way..my vehicle, and my friends, are both 200 HP... hers, a Sebring, mine a voyager..but what's attached changes the end app..I fly down the road like a pig, but I can carry a heck of a lot more...
Empirical Audio said:
Secondly, I propose a better metric.....
An interesting metric..and being tried..
I am working on a better metric, one that is based on energy storage and phase delays, but it is still quite a ways off...requiring quite a bit of test setup design.
RE: inductance/capacitance tradeoff..
The ideal transmission line will have L * C = 1031 * DC (relative dielectric coefficient). L in nanohenries per foot, C in pf per foot..the ideal will be coaxial, with inner conductor tubular.
That sets the minimum product that can be obtained, all designs based on a specific dielectric will follow that product, or if the geometry is inefficient, the product will be higher..never lower.
If you examine the graph, you can see the effect the geometry (or in your case, additional elements plus geometry) has on the product..for efficient geometries, these lines would be exactly the dielectric coefficients of the materials the wires are composed of.. As a result of inefficiencies and lumped elements, they are quite a bit higher in some cases, than the actual DC.
Your point that the elements skew the numbers is well taken...perhaps, in the future, both sets should be reported..as, higher inductance cable sets, by design, store more energy, and are more susceptible to external magnetic field loop pickup..while a lumped element does not necessarily do the same, and may indeed be a plus..
Cheers, John