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<blockquote data-quote="Kyle_Keating" data-source="post: 4918565" data-attributes="member: 582385"><p>actually more wire does not guarantee lower distortion, the properties dont change. Sure you can ultimately put more current into a larger mass of wire, but this leads to other complications, higher moving mass creates sensitivity losses and a moving coil can induce a magnetic charge inside the motor making it act as a loss inductor which causes frequency dependence sensitivity losses and also creates a flux modulation distortion at lower frequencies depending on the symmetry of the inductance with respect to displacement. More wire also does not get rid of the fundamental problem, even just a little current will cause a difference in temperature which then causes a difference in resistance in aluminum and copper. And arguably if you have more wire, you'll need more current to move it which is why more B is generally the sound quality approach to increasing BL. More B can also combat flux modulation and inductance by creating a saturated motor that is incapable of storing more charge in one direction due to saturation, and likewise it wont allow magnetic charge to be stored in the reverse direction (because the magnets keep it steady) its hard to get a motor to saturate in the right locations but non the less... more wire is not a sound quality catalyst.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Kyle_Keating, post: 4918565, member: 582385"] actually more wire does not guarantee lower distortion, the properties dont change. Sure you can ultimately put more current into a larger mass of wire, but this leads to other complications, higher moving mass creates sensitivity losses and a moving coil can induce a magnetic charge inside the motor making it act as a loss inductor which causes frequency dependence sensitivity losses and also creates a flux modulation distortion at lower frequencies depending on the symmetry of the inductance with respect to displacement. More wire also does not get rid of the fundamental problem, even just a little current will cause a difference in temperature which then causes a difference in resistance in aluminum and copper. And arguably if you have more wire, you'll need more current to move it which is why more B is generally the sound quality approach to increasing BL. More B can also combat flux modulation and inductance by creating a saturated motor that is incapable of storing more charge in one direction due to saturation, and likewise it wont allow magnetic charge to be stored in the reverse direction (because the magnets keep it steady) its hard to get a motor to saturate in the right locations but non the less... more wire is not a sound quality catalyst. [/QUOTE]
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