Braiding vs side by side?


I have a custom speaker cable (teflon/silver about 16 ga) that has separate cable for the + and another for the -. I can leave them separate, running along side each other, or twist them together. Any reasons for one being better than the other?

These are brand new and will try it both ways but curious if there is any science behind it.
onemug
Tgrisham, thanks very much for the nice words.

Here is a link to the Stereophile measurements on the Maggie that Onemug referred to.

Data for 16 gauge wire can be obtained from this wire gauge table. Plugging the 1.29 mm conductor diameter that it indicates into this calculator yields an inductance of 5.95 uH (microHenries) for the 16 foot round-trip that the signal has to make, based on the worst case assumption that the two conductors are widely spaced.

Based on the formula for inductive reactance (the inductive form of impedance), 2 x pi x f x L, where f is frequency in Hertz and L is inductance in Henries, 5.95 uH corresponds to an inductive reactance of 0.75 ohms at the worst case frequency (20kHz). That verges on being negligible in relation to 4 ohms, taking into account that the phase angles of that reactance and the speaker's impedance differ considerably. (If the angles were identical, the resulting loss at 20kHz would correspond to 4/(4 + 0.75) = -1.5db).

Alternatively, this calculator, which was called to my attention by Shadorne in a thread a while back, can be used. For wide spacing of the conductors, it indicates a loss of about 0.1db at 20kHz into an 8 ohm resistive load (and less than that in relation to the slight loss that occurs at low frequencies, due to resistance). That would approximately double into 4 ohms, and increase a little more due to the somewhat inductive impedance characteristic of the speaker at high frequencies.

As that calculator makes clear, the loss numbers would diminish to complete insignificance if the wires were twisted, especially given that the thin insulation makes it possible for the conductors to be in close proximity.

So the bottom line for the 8 foot run length and the particular speakers appears to be, to the extent that cable effects are explainable by generally recognized science, that it probably won't make much difference either way, but twisting can't hurt (assuming you have confidence in the integrity of the insulation, so that shorts won't occur) and may help slightly. That may also be true for the reason Hifihvn cited, if either of the amplifiers are sensitive to rfi that may be presented to their output terminals.
Was wondering if the thicker wire would help the Cary out in the damping dept?
I doubt it. The 16 foot round-trip length of 16 gauge wire corresponds to a resistance of 0.064 ohms, based on the wire gauge table I linked to above. Paralleling two conductors for each leg would halve that to 0.032 ohms. Adding either number to the 1.5 ohm amplifier output impedance would not change the damping factor significantly.

Best regards,
-- Al
Al, thank you for doing all that research, I'm learning a lot.

Other than a limited SPL, do you see any reason a SET amp would be a mismatch for the 3.6's? My thoughts are/were: The Maggies are pretty resistive in nature (tubes like that) and, being a line source, will sound louder at the listening position than a point source of the same specs (so less power would be needed).
I second Tgrisham, good advice Al. Now wouldn't it be nice if Audiogon was organized so that you did not have to answer similar requests every other week?

Or is there a deliberate design in the way that Audiogon repeats the same threads endlessly? XLR vs RCA. Damping factor.

Audiogon = The Matrix ??

Anyone else notice the wrinkle in The Matrix (The "I've seen that thread so many times before" moment)?
braiding vs parallel runs is only one consideration when designing a cable.

have you considered solid core vs stranded ? have you considered multi gauage vs single guage, have you considered shielding, have you considered dielectric, have you considered connectors, have you considered method of connection, have you considered metal ?, have you considered alloy ?, have you considered combining methals, not as an alloy ?, have you considered plating ?

there are probably other variables.

i would think that capacitance is more significant for interconnects and inductance is more significant for speaker cables.
Very nice posting again Almarg. I too am very appreciative that you take the time out to make such in depth replies.

To Shadorne's point about deja vu/The Matrix moments. I've been coming here frequently in recent years and I get that "I've seen that thread so many times before" moment all the time. For you members that have been here for years I'm surprised you haven't gone nuts already with all the repeat questions.

I think it is part A'gon issue in design that repeat questions come up so often. The other is on the part of the user. I think a lot of posters just don't search the archives before posting. I think I just saw yet another power cord question thread.

Again thanks to Al and other veteran members who take the time out to answer all the duplicate questions in such detail.

Also my apologies to Onemug for the thread hi-jack.