Directionality Explained


I have read it argued against by those who think they know
Here is proof
Paul Speltz Founder of ANTICABLES shares his thoughts about wire directionality. Dear Fellow Audiophiles, As an electronic engineer, I struggled years ago with the idea of wire being directional because it did not fit into any of the electrical models I had learned. It simply did not make sense to me that an alternating music signal should favor a direction in a conductor. One of the great things about our audio hobby is that we are able to hear things well before we can explain them; and just because we can’t explain something, doesn't mean that it is not real. 

https://www.monoandstereo.com/2020/05/wire-directionality.html#more
tweak1
Geoffkait,
Quote; We still don’t know the mechanism for how/why the sound is changed by physical asymmetry of wire.

 Hee hee, "In a nut-shell", "That", Is all I was saying really.....
Same-day, Different nut-shell!

Quote;  The voltage drop across a wire is different for each direction. 

And that quote above is "To me", empirical evidence. And is quite difficult to argue with!
 I guess I sometimes get "stuck" when the mechanism or the "Why", and/or the "How" are yet unknowns, and undefined.
But that is just me.

djones51
2,061 posts05-27-2020 7:28amSound and hearing the amazing things we know in the 21st century.

http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/hframe.html

>>>>That’s weird. I don’t see wire directionality mentioned anywhere on that site. Or even an explanation of what the audio signal is. Oh well, maybe all those big brains 🧠 will get around to it in the 22nd century. What they omitted is what we don’t know. 😬
Let me see if I rip the wire out of my wall and reverse it instead of reading 121 volts as it does now it's going to read what? 50 volts?