I need help on directionality of speaker cables


I just picked up a pair of Harmonic Tech Pro 9 speaker cables which have an arrow on the label. Should the arrow point towards the amp or the speakers?
128x128pdreher
Wow, this thread got carried away down the wrong road.

As an EE, the way I see it is that cables with direction arrows on them are solely to get the shield grounded properly. End of story. If they have no shield, there is no good reason for the arrows that I can see.

Skin effect is a function of frequency so DC signals never see it.

Arthur
he reason I ask is that a digital signal, by it's very nature, doesn't have frequency in the way analog signals do. As I've quoted above from a reputable book on electronics, a digital waveform is a DC signal that varies between zero volts and a max volts,

Transmission of digital data, as I quoted from the electronics text, is DC

You are probably confusing the way Digital is represented in a drawing....most encyclopedia's and layman reference material incorrectly represents digital. When you see a typical analog waveform drawn with a "digital" stair steps superimposed that look like DC levels.... this is WRONG it doesn't exist like this.

Sorry but I studied digital signal processing and analysis in college...the whole subject has been badly dumbed down and leads to much confusion and fear of digital ( obviously a stair case is nothing remotely close to an analog waveform and hence the source of some of the malicious rumours about digital )

Digital data is sent as analog waveforms. Toslink Light is an alternating waveform as is the signal on an RCA coax or an HDMI cable. Typically all electronic devices used some form of MODEM between digital devices (Modulator and Demodulator; the digital data is encoded into some form of alternating signal often with a separate or embedded clock alternating signal to help in decoding the "states" into discrete "bits").
Aball, you are the one who first stated that the arrows were in the direction of the current! Surely, as an EE, you didn't mean that, but meant the direction of the signal.
As for the shield concept indicating the direction of the cable, well we covered that.
However, it is good to finally get an EE to set the record straight on direction of current in an AC carrying circuit.
Bob P.
What do you think the "signal" is? And don't forget Ohm's Law...

Also, talking about polarity of AC signals is not technically correct. It isn't like DC. AC signals don't have polarity per se, but rather phase angles. The actual direction depends on the relative complex values of the angles. Remember we are talking about voltage and current information for music and not a single sine wave.

Cable makers should just use a sticker or mark on the end of the cable that has shield ground and tell people that the sticker "should" go on the source side. It would cut down on the confusion the arrow causes people, but it would be more complicated to explain, so I guess they chose the easy path.

Arthur
Oh dear. Looks like most reference material(mostly from cable manufacturers) have misinterpret skin effect in digital cables. But I believe the one stated in Wikipedia is still genuine.

I've just asked one of my colleagues in the same firm who is an EE and without any hesitation said that it's DC in digital. However, when asked about "skin effect" in digital, he said he read it somewhere in the books years ago and not too sure on its function now. When asked about directionality in cables, he's not convinced at all. BTW he has only has a Sony mini compo for his audio system and not exactly an audio enthusiast.