In the transmission of the signal in digital cables, electron travels down the cable at the frequencies used by audio/video signals. The higher the frequency of the signal, the more this signal is pushed to the surface of the cable, and the skin of the conductor itself carries a considerable portion of the signal. This phenomena which is called skin effect is a tendency for AC current to flow mostly near the outer surface of the solid electrical conductor at frequencies above the audio range.
In skin effect, the effective resistance of a wire is increased for AC current at moderate to high frequencies compared to the resistance of the same wire at DC current and low AC frequencies. In other words, both AC and DC current exist in digital cables.
I think the issue we need to be certain of here is whether we can really correlate AC current, which is non-directional, to the debate of directionality of cables. There may be other variables that may be overlooked.
On a separate note, I have always followed manufacturer's recommendations and never reversed the directionality of interconnects all this while but have once reversed my speaker cables for the sake of experimenting. Frankly I'm not so sure. I thought it sounded little messy, but then maybe it's in my head.
I guess we can kill off this discussion now for what could be just a simple question to the poster.
In skin effect, the effective resistance of a wire is increased for AC current at moderate to high frequencies compared to the resistance of the same wire at DC current and low AC frequencies. In other words, both AC and DC current exist in digital cables.
I think the issue we need to be certain of here is whether we can really correlate AC current, which is non-directional, to the debate of directionality of cables. There may be other variables that may be overlooked.
On a separate note, I have always followed manufacturer's recommendations and never reversed the directionality of interconnects all this while but have once reversed my speaker cables for the sake of experimenting. Frankly I'm not so sure. I thought it sounded little messy, but then maybe it's in my head.
I guess we can kill off this discussion now for what could be just a simple question to the poster.