P
pwnell
Audiophyte
I am trying to understand at a technical level why impedance is never mentioned as a major problem at the upper end of the audio frequency spectrum in speaker cables.
I have reviewed http://www.audioholics.com/audio-video-cables/calculating-cable-inductance-of-zip-cord and used http://chemandy.com/calculators/round-wire-impedance-calculator.htm to calculate impedance at say 22kHz.
If I use a very long run of AWG18 wire (yes, I know - one should use thicker wire but this is not about resistance as much as inductive reactance as the thickness of the cable does not adversely affect the inductive reactance), with the following parameters:
Frequency: 22kHz (0.022MHz)
Length: 40000mm (a 20m surround speaker run, thus 40m in total length including return path)
Diameter: 1.024mm
Relative permeability of insulator picked as 1 (for air, PVC should be similar)
I get Z = 0.85 +j12.4 Ohms.
The magnitude of this vector is 12.43 Ohms. Therefore, the inductive reactance contributes 93% of the total impedance. All the articles mention that the most important part is minimising R, i.e. picking a thicker cable but in these calculations it would make no real difference. Picking a thick cable such as AWG10 would result in:
Z = 0.22 + j11.28 Ohms which is 11.3 Ohms, and inductive reactance still contribute to 98% of the losses.
Can someone explain to me what I am missing - why this high impedance caused by inductance at high frequencies is not an issue?
I have reviewed http://www.audioholics.com/audio-video-cables/calculating-cable-inductance-of-zip-cord and used http://chemandy.com/calculators/round-wire-impedance-calculator.htm to calculate impedance at say 22kHz.
If I use a very long run of AWG18 wire (yes, I know - one should use thicker wire but this is not about resistance as much as inductive reactance as the thickness of the cable does not adversely affect the inductive reactance), with the following parameters:
Frequency: 22kHz (0.022MHz)
Length: 40000mm (a 20m surround speaker run, thus 40m in total length including return path)
Diameter: 1.024mm
Relative permeability of insulator picked as 1 (for air, PVC should be similar)
I get Z = 0.85 +j12.4 Ohms.
The magnitude of this vector is 12.43 Ohms. Therefore, the inductive reactance contributes 93% of the total impedance. All the articles mention that the most important part is minimising R, i.e. picking a thicker cable but in these calculations it would make no real difference. Picking a thick cable such as AWG10 would result in:
Z = 0.22 + j11.28 Ohms which is 11.3 Ohms, and inductive reactance still contribute to 98% of the losses.
Can someone explain to me what I am missing - why this high impedance caused by inductance at high frequencies is not an issue?