*WHITE PAPER* The Sound of Music - How & Why the Speaker Cable Matters


G'DAY

I’ve spent a sizeable amount of the last year putting together this white paper: The Sound of Music and Error in Your Speaker Cables

Yes, I’ve done it for all the naysayers but mainly for all the cable advocates that know how you connect your separates determines the level of accuracy you can part from your system.

I’ve often theorized what is happening but now, here is some proof of what we are indeed hearing in speaker cables caused by the mismatch between the characteristic impedance of the speaker cable and the loudspeaker impedance.

I’ve included the circuit so you can build and test this out for yourselves.


Let the fun begin


Max Townshend 

Townshend Audio



townshend-audio

We are doing a Zoom session 6 PM GMT 5 Dec, and we will show you the test with the same cables.


Great so you are going to do a zoom call that shows that lower inductance cables have less voltage drop than higher inductance cables, something almost no on disputes and you are going to claim it is because of transmission line effects.


Townshend-audio, It appears that you joined our audio forum only in attempt to place free advertisement for your product. It is dishonest IMO and I wouldn't buy anything from you. Audio2design attempted to explain to you why using square waves in audio is nonsense, but you don't get it.

Administrator please remove townshend-audio posting. We don't want it here. You want to advertise? - pay like everybody else.
Square waves have been universally used in audio since the invention of the oscilloscope and the square wave oscillator. It is an essential tool in our industry because it allows you to analyse all audio frequencies at once.

As far as accuracy is concerned, some measurements may be out by +/-20%, but that is not the point.

Join in the Zoom session 6 PM GMT 5 Dec and I will show you the experiment and you can ask any question you like.
The process of the scientific method involves making conjectures (hypotheses), deriving predictions from them as logical consequences, and then carrying out experiments or empirical observations based on those predictions.[5][6] A hypothesis is a conjecture, based on knowledge obtained while seeking answers to the question. The hypothesis might be very specific, or it might be broad. Scientists then test hypotheses by conducting experiments or studies.