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PostPosted: May 20th, 2024, 11:06 am 
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Joined: July 17th, 2016, 6:24 am
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I always wondered how does current know not to pass thru open wires. It doesn't, it learns by probing, not once but 8 times.

very interesting video.


https://youtu.be/2AXv49dDQJw?si=DEhenh21eBY9XZKs


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PostPosted: May 21st, 2024, 4:40 pm 
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Trying to understand the implications of this and how it relates to audio.
His set up to measure this is nowhere set in reality, and are these effects even present in an audio system.
The fact that electricity travels down an open circuit and bounces back makes no since to me.

Also what has been popular for a while now is the grounding enhancements that cost a fortune and have you connect components grounds to a box that goes nowhere and supposed to reduce noise and have better focus if one is to believe the hype.


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PostPosted: May 22nd, 2024, 2:44 pm 
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Pelliott321 wrote:
Trying to understand the implications of this and how it relates to audio.
His set up to measure this is nowhere set in reality, and are these effects even present in an audio system.

I posted it because, it shows how the current/electors flow in a circuit. Haven't seen this level of detailed explanation anywhere.

Since the circuit settles down in nanoseconds after startup, there should not be any effect on audio in run-time.
The most interesting part of the experiment was, how he used an oscilloscope's frequency to measure how the current flow in a circuit. Very smart setup.
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The fact that electricity travels down an open circuit and bounces back makes no since to me.

Come to think about it, there is current present in open circuit, it is just not going anywhere. That explains why we get shock when we touch open wires.
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Also what has been popular for a while now is the grounding enhancements that cost a fortune and have you connect components grounds to a box that goes nowhere and supposed to reduce noise and have better focus if one is to believe the hype.

May be experts like David Berning can explain the phenomenon.


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PostPosted: May 22nd, 2024, 2:54 pm 
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We get a shock from an open circuit because when we get the shock current is flowing, it is not open any longer.

He is seeing reflections in the video, it's not a newly discovered phenomenon.

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PostPosted: May 22nd, 2024, 4:03 pm 
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A wire that ends is only an open circuit at DC. For any f>0, it’s an antenna, and current flows in antennas just fine…

Roscoe

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