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#1
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I've been reading lots of messages/posts/articles on cable
directionality lately, and I thought I'd share my insights. IMO, directionality is real, and is related to grain boundaries. I race electric R/C cars. We use multi-strand 14 or 12 AWG wire, for the most part. Our motors pull about 35 A on average, with spikes of .... 500 amps or more. One area where I think directionality plays, is the brushes. These are sintered blocks of copper/silver/graphite, quite grainy. Out of the package, all brushes are identical. Run them once , and they act directional. they build up resistance in the direction that they are used. Reverse them, and they make more power. For a while. You can't keep alternating though, once you've used them in both directions, they're basically 'used'. Another area where I think directionality is in play is the cables of a welder. Well ,the cables + connectors. They too build up resistance, gradually. Reverse them, and they're like new. I think A) extreme currents and B) grain boundaries are essential ingredients to the appearance of directionality. I would even say grain boundaries act as little diodes. So, my response to all those posts/articles saying "I have tested such-and-such in my lab, and I didn't measure any directionality, so it doesn't exist and it's an urban myth", is: look closer. You can't say "I tested this and found nothing, so it doesn't exist". "It wasn't in my physics handbook, so it isn't true". You could say something like "I have tested in x different conditions which I think are representative, so the probability that it doesn't exist in my cables under my circumstances is very high." There are a million thing that we don't know yet. I still don't know what happens when 500 amps run though a 16 AWG wire. I say: step up the current and you'll find things you haven't seen before. |
#2
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#3
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#4
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chung wrote:
If there is directionality in cables, then the resistance in one direction must be different than in the other. It *must* show up in distortion measurements. ....or in resistance measurements, eh? |
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