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Don Pearce wrote in message
It acts as a transmission line at every frequency. The question of how you choose to model it is quite different. No, you aren't modelling it the way it is, but as an approximate abstraction - more than good enough to give you the results you want. That is of course the nature of all models, but some are further abstracted than others. I agree, if we are making a standard model from R, L, C, and/or even RF transmission lines. There is one model type, however, that is as accurate as the best test equipment. That would be a two-port, S-parameter, data file. A speaker cable's S-parameters can be measured by an HP Network Analyzer, (down to the lowest RF frequencies). Then below RF, Y-parameters can be used down to the lowest audio frequencies. (The Y-parameters can then be converted to S-parameters.) Now, you have an S-parameter, two-port data file, that goes from audio to RF. A circuit analysis program can use this file to simulate the speaker cable. The two-port data file is treated, as a *component*. The output of the program will be exactly the same as the data the network analyzer measured. The nice thing about this two-port data component model is: it will also work in low frequency AC circuit analysis programs, with *any source and any load impedance*. Using a voltage source and a typical *loudspeaker load*, it will give the response of that cable into that load, even though the speaker cable was originally measured using equal source and load impedance. Bob Stanton |
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