gene said:
Note that C is dependent on the conductor spacing and dielectric material so by simply measuring Cp, you confirm a good/bad conductor spacing and dielectric used. Rs will show you when skin effect really does start becoming an issue. It is always measurable but usually not audible, especially in the bandwidth in question and the humans ears that are listening.
C<sub>p</sub> measurement will only provide the actual capacitance, it will not tell you if the conductor spacing is good or bad, nor will it tell you if the dielectric is any good. It is only a metric.
Determination of whether it is good or not is dependent on what criteria is set. If,for example, you feel that minimum wire energy storage is wanted, then the characteristic impedance of the cable has to be the same as that of the load..this can be derived by inspection of the equations:
E<sub>L</sub> = <sup>1</sup>/<sub>2</sub>L I<sup>2</sup>
E<sub>C</sub> = <sup>1</sup>/<sub>2</sub>C V<sup>2</sup>
By simply inserting the numbers based on an 8 ohm load line, and plotting characteristic impedance vs. stored energy, it is easily seen that the storage minima coincides with the load impedance used.. Although impedance matching is typically a reflection coefficient transmission line thing, it turns out that the energy storage in the wire is indeed following the same mechanism responsible for wave propogation along a transmission line.
If I could have posted the graph I wished, that would be obvious to all..Also of note, is that for a typical 200 nH per foot parallel run, the characteristic impedance is 119.87 ohms, C<sub>p</sub> is 13.918 pf per foot, and energy storage is 25 uJoules per foot (using a 100 watt reference at 8 ohms).
As to audibility of that level of storage, keep in mind that 100 W<sub>RMS</sub> at 10Khz, is 200w/20,000cps, or .01 Joules per pulse, 10 millijoules, or 10,000 uJoules..a ten foot zip run stores 250 uJoules peak at this power level, or 2.5%. A half cycle 10Khz is 50 uSec, so in theory, a zip cord feeding an 8 ohm load can store the equivalent inductive energy of 1.25 uSec worth of 10Khz sine wave. (Some simplifications were used, but if you wish a rigorous determination, no problem).
Should the system impedance dip, the energy storage will be proportional to the square of the current..if it reaches 4 ohms, the current doubles, the power by a factor of 4, the time energy equiv of 5 uSec..well within human lateralization perception..again, a graph would help..
gene said:
I am sure Jneutron will come here and discuss the moons gravitational flux density affecting the tachyon emissions of the wire, and he will probably even model it for you, but I suspect he wont provide a measurement or a way to auditorally confirm it

Sorry John, I had to draw first blood here
Be careful what you start..unless you really want me to get technical on ya..
Cheers, John
PS..mudcat: I didn't miss the "pocket protector" statement...you will get yours, you mechanical engineer you..