Directional wires/cables


Is there any reason to support the idea that cables, interconnects or any other kind of wiring can be considered directional? It seems that the theory is that carrying current will alter the molecular structure of the wire. I can't find anything that supports this other than in the case of extreme temperature variation. Cryo seems to be a common treatment for wire nowadays. Extreme heat would do something as well, just nothing favorable. No idea if cryo treatment works but who knows. Back to the question, can using the wires in one direction or another actually affect it's performance? Thanks for any thoughts. I do abide by the arrows when I have them. I "mostly" follow directions but I have pondered over this one every time I hook up  a pair.

billpete

The brands of interconnects with directionality, as specified by the manufacturer, that I have, have all stated that the reason for the directionality is that the shield is grounded at the source end and is floating at the destination end.

This reason makes sense to me, from an interference shielding reasoning.

None of these brands have claimed that the reason for the directionality is that it is about a specific grain structure.

BS TO directionality! I RECAL AUDIOHOLICS SAID IT WAS bs
AND THEY TESTED THE AQ cables w/ the battery and they made MORE noise w/a battery installed than not ! AQ cables are proven to be snake oil rip off it's like Bernie Madoff figured out how to scam and not get in legal trouble ! LOL 
but you will hear the cult members insist they work reminds me of Scientologists! 
cryo ? may work many famous indy car engine builders use it has LONG history of believers i heard of it w/ race engines 50 years ago!
I understand GR research offers it ( cryo ) free if you get cables fr them and theirs are awesome and actually a bargain! & NOT SNAKE OIL! ck them out ! I think I read iF YOU GET THEIR diy CABLE KIT AND MAKE SOME DIY YOU CAN SEND YOURS AND THEY WILL INCLUDE THEM IN A CRYO TREATMENT FREE?

Thank you jeffbij for your excellent explanation of all of this. I really appreciate it & I’m sure many others here do as well. 

Not to start a war here, but it is physics not sentienticy, and grain configuration/stresses in the metal do affect electron flow

@jeffbij Not to continue the war, but while the existence of crystalline grains affecting electron flow may have a base in physics, it still does not support the idea of cables being directional. A musical signal alternates - potentially imperfectly at times, and an AC current (power) alternates rather perfectly, even if potentially distorted from a pure sine wave. Also, note that what is typically called ’electrical current’ is not the motion of electrons, but the variation in electromagnetic field, which is not the same thing at all (see e.g. Veritasium’s video on electricity).

I’ll accept that asymmetrically terminated cables (e.g. with shielding connected at one end only) may transmit signal differently if plugged in A --> B vs. B --> A, however I would also point out that it’s not ’the material in the cable’ being directional as such, but the effectiveness of the shielding in two different points of the EM field.

This said, if people believe that they hear differences, I’m not getting in their way.

@jeffbij  Would OCC cable not render the directional question moot, as most cable lengths we use would, in theory anyway, be one single elongated grain?