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In Reply to: RE: A Question for All... posted by John Elison on May 30, 2023 at 14:31:49
Excellent example of logical fallacy. Obviously wires will "work" in either direction, that's not the issue, Mr. Smarty Pants, but wires always sound better in one direction vs the other. I win. You apparently don't even know what directionality is. In any case, I leave you with one final thought. Two wires are needed for the speaker to work, + and -. The incoming signal on + wire makes the speaker diaphragms move out, and the incoming signal on the - wire makes it go IN. It doesn't take an Albert Einstein to see that the incoming signal on both the + and - wires should be in the preferred direction of the wires. You can ignore the signal when it's going away from the speaker in both cases.That's why wire is directional in an AC circuit.
Edits: 05/30/23 05/30/23 05/30/23 05/30/23 05/30/23Follow Ups:
Since all wires and interconnects in a stereo system operate just as you describe, how do you find an interconnect in which both conductors are assembled in the correct direction? In fact, how would you ever know unless you build your own? Even then, how would you ever know?
AudioQuest cables are all controlled for directionality, there may be other companies, most cables companies are blissfully unaware of wire directionality or choose to ignore it. As I said all one has to do it try it both ways. That's nit of difficult, is it? A fuse, speaker cables, interconnects.
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