Thanks for the nice words, Mesch. Yes, JA's measurements, and the interpretations he provides in the associated text, certainly represent major contributions to the hobby. I couldn't begin to count the number of times I and many others have referred to them in threads here, in identifying potential mismatches when components are being considered for purchase, and in diagnosing problems. And it has been extremely rare that I've ever sensed that his measurement-related comments might be in error in some way.
Good follow-up by Larry in his above post.
Regarding your question:
Generally speaker cable capacitance is not a significant concern, except in those few cases where it is extremely high. A few cables, such as Goertz, achieve ultra-low inductance at the expense of having ultra-high capacitance. Those kinds of cables should, especially if driven by solid state amplifiers, generally be used with a Zobel network, or otherwise their extremely high capacitance can adversely affect the sonic performance of the amplifier, or even cause it to oscillate and self-destruct.
In typical situations, though, speaker cable capacitance is a non-issue. It can, however, be a quite significant consideration in the cases of line level interconnects and phono cables.
Given adequate gauge, and correspondingly low resistance, speaker cable inductance can be the one of the three parameters that is particularly important. But its criticality will depend on the impedance characteristics of the speaker at high frequencies. Inductive reactance (the inductive form of impedance, which is measured in ohms) is directly proportional to frequency, and will be negligible for any reasonably designed cable at low and mid audio frequencies. It can become significant at high frequencies, though, especially if speaker impedance is low at those frequencies. The impedance of many box-type dynamic speakers tends to increase in the upper treble region, fortunately. But many electrostatic speakers have impedances which descend to 1 ohm or thereabouts at 20 kHz, which will make cable inductance particularly critical. Once again, JA's measurements can help to sort things like that out.
Best,
-- Al
Good follow-up by Larry in his above post.
Regarding your question:
Would it be fair to say that capacitance becomes a most critical issue over inductance or resistance in regards to speaker and speaker cable interaction with cables having adequate isolation between the = and - strands and of an adequate gauge?I think that the following comments address the intent of your question, but let me know if I'm misinterpreting your post.
Generally speaker cable capacitance is not a significant concern, except in those few cases where it is extremely high. A few cables, such as Goertz, achieve ultra-low inductance at the expense of having ultra-high capacitance. Those kinds of cables should, especially if driven by solid state amplifiers, generally be used with a Zobel network, or otherwise their extremely high capacitance can adversely affect the sonic performance of the amplifier, or even cause it to oscillate and self-destruct.
In typical situations, though, speaker cable capacitance is a non-issue. It can, however, be a quite significant consideration in the cases of line level interconnects and phono cables.
Given adequate gauge, and correspondingly low resistance, speaker cable inductance can be the one of the three parameters that is particularly important. But its criticality will depend on the impedance characteristics of the speaker at high frequencies. Inductive reactance (the inductive form of impedance, which is measured in ohms) is directly proportional to frequency, and will be negligible for any reasonably designed cable at low and mid audio frequencies. It can become significant at high frequencies, though, especially if speaker impedance is low at those frequencies. The impedance of many box-type dynamic speakers tends to increase in the upper treble region, fortunately. But many electrostatic speakers have impedances which descend to 1 ohm or thereabouts at 20 kHz, which will make cable inductance particularly critical. Once again, JA's measurements can help to sort things like that out.
Best,
-- Al