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ok, i may not understand how things really work, but here is my working model (in my brain). the propogation of a voltage change is the direct result of the migration of electrons from one molocule to another along the cable. it is the abundance or scarcity of electrons that defines a positive and negative voltage (in relation to ground...at the ground state, there is neither an abundance or scarcity). if this isn't what "voltage" is, then what is it? deknow ----- Original Message ----- From: <SoundFNR@aol.com> To: <Loopers-Delight@loopers-delight.com> Sent: Friday, March 29, 2002 1:42 AM Subject: re[3]: Cables have direction/direction > > andy, it's true that the voltage swing isn't instantanious, but it does > > alternate between pushing electrons and pulling them. > > > the way you put it, yes, the electrons do move from one end of the cable > to > > the other, but they always move back the other direction as well. > > > > Hi Dean, all you say is correct, especially about the relative distances > involved. > ..... but I think you missed the point. > I'm not talking flow of electrons here, > but the propagation of the Voltage change along the cable. > Think of sound traveling through air, the molecules end up in the same place, > but the sound travels in one direction. > > The other analogy I thought of would be singing (not playing) > into a didjeridoo. Bet it would sound different depending which end you > sang into (didj players??). > > Anyway, at the moment I'm not tempted to try my cables in different > directions, and I bet what Hans says holds most of the answer to this. > > andy butler > > > > >