Pneumonic
Well-known member
Indeed, the wider apart the wires are the lower the C will be while the closer together the wires are the lower the L will be. This becomes an issue for an ESL because it performs best when both C and, especially, L are low in a speaker cable design. One way around this is to use a coax design which allows for 1 wire to be inside the other .... which gives the required low L value. But what of the now high value for C? The way to keep a high C cable from forming with coax wires so close to each other is to use a thick dielectric of high value. Voila, you now have a low L and low C cable as needed. At this point you just need to keep the R large enough to damp the high f L/C cct resonance that forms between the ESL's tranny's leakage L and C of the ESL itself.Inductance is dependable of how close the two wires are. If thy are twisted together, you can reduce it dramatically. If you can not twist them together, then separate them at least 1/2 an inch. This will reduce the inductance.
You have that upside down. The closer together, the less inductance. Twisting may help keep them together.
For the most part, capacitance and inductance are opposite sides of the same coin. If you reduce one the other one increases.
Last edited: