OK. Thanks for defining what you mean. So lets look at power.
I ran a simulation and calculated the power dissipated in the cartridge series R and the load R and plotted what happened to the total power as the load cap is varied.
The voltage and current must be in phase for a resistor so power remains V^2/R. We know that the voltage across the load R is reduced as the cap is increased- after all, that’s the objective- so the load power must fall- but what about the series R? I calculated this and added it to the load power to get the total power.
So, back to the "real" case with a 11.8uH winding inductance , 16 ohm Rcart, 85pF load and 100 ohms. I set the input to 1v rms and calculated the total power in the two resistors =10*log(((voltageacrossRcart^2/16) +(voltageacrossloadr^2/100))
The power plot starts at -20.6dB at LF then falls by 3dB at 1.7MHz and by 18dB at 10MHz. No peak is present.
I then changed the cap to 0.1uF.
The power at 1kHz was -20.6dB, it peaks at -13dB at 150kHz , is 3dB off the peak at 87kHz and 320kHz, then falls monotonically by 25dB at 10MHz.
So we’re measuring 1/7 the bandwidth and a bit less than 6x the power in that bandwidth- which is, again, hardly surprising, so the power is more or less constant, but the total power at 10MHz is reduced and the load power at RF is hugely reduced, so isn’t that better?
Is the increase in power dissipation in the cartridge at supersonic but not RF frequencies problematic?
Darn! I wish I had some way of showing plots.
I ran a simulation and calculated the power dissipated in the cartridge series R and the load R and plotted what happened to the total power as the load cap is varied.
The voltage and current must be in phase for a resistor so power remains V^2/R. We know that the voltage across the load R is reduced as the cap is increased- after all, that’s the objective- so the load power must fall- but what about the series R? I calculated this and added it to the load power to get the total power.
So, back to the "real" case with a 11.8uH winding inductance , 16 ohm Rcart, 85pF load and 100 ohms. I set the input to 1v rms and calculated the total power in the two resistors =10*log(((voltageacrossRcart^2/16) +(voltageacrossloadr^2/100))
The power plot starts at -20.6dB at LF then falls by 3dB at 1.7MHz and by 18dB at 10MHz. No peak is present.
I then changed the cap to 0.1uF.
The power at 1kHz was -20.6dB, it peaks at -13dB at 150kHz , is 3dB off the peak at 87kHz and 320kHz, then falls monotonically by 25dB at 10MHz.
So we’re measuring 1/7 the bandwidth and a bit less than 6x the power in that bandwidth- which is, again, hardly surprising, so the power is more or less constant, but the total power at 10MHz is reduced and the load power at RF is hugely reduced, so isn’t that better?
Is the increase in power dissipation in the cartridge at supersonic but not RF frequencies problematic?
Darn! I wish I had some way of showing plots.