It’s called complex impedance interactions of parallel runs and... well.... interactions from the additional mass.
A bit of lenz law, a bit of this ...a bit of that...capacitance here, a bit of capacitance there...
Even the skin pigment in a cable can cause a change in the sound.
Long long story and the measurements can only be a small bit of the tale.
eg, the ’uncoupled at the tweeter’ run is still altering the load the amplifier sees, specifically in the transient domain...which cases the feedback circuit to modify the signal to compensate. In most amplifiers, that is.
Like some sort of unwanted extra long outrigger on an ocean going speedboat. the extra long outrigger is not responding to the waves near the boat, and thus improperly interferes with the boat’s correct operation.
the drivers and crossovers are a similar load, actually, magnitudes more complex than the wire but...... we listen via transients and that’s where the effect lies, so your entire hearing system is wired into hearing just that part of the signal ---so of course you hear it.
We don’t hear like an engineering measurement at all. The two systems (’standard measurement techniques’ and hearing) literally don’t jibe.
A bit of lenz law, a bit of this ...a bit of that...capacitance here, a bit of capacitance there...
Even the skin pigment in a cable can cause a change in the sound.
Long long story and the measurements can only be a small bit of the tale.
eg, the ’uncoupled at the tweeter’ run is still altering the load the amplifier sees, specifically in the transient domain...which cases the feedback circuit to modify the signal to compensate. In most amplifiers, that is.
Like some sort of unwanted extra long outrigger on an ocean going speedboat. the extra long outrigger is not responding to the waves near the boat, and thus improperly interferes with the boat’s correct operation.
the drivers and crossovers are a similar load, actually, magnitudes more complex than the wire but...... we listen via transients and that’s where the effect lies, so your entire hearing system is wired into hearing just that part of the signal ---so of course you hear it.
We don’t hear like an engineering measurement at all. The two systems (’standard measurement techniques’ and hearing) literally don’t jibe.