JohnSwenson;619078 Wrote: 
> Most wires have a "grain structure" where there are discontinuities in
> the crystal matrix. The impurities in the metal tend to congregate at
> the grain boundaries. These impurities cause a very weak semiconductor
> effect which does "VERY SLIGHTLY" effect the signal traveling through
> the cable. These impurity atoms do migrate through the metal very
> slowly, due to both basic thermal action and under the influence of
> electrical currents, thuse slowly changing the concentrations of
> impurity atoms at the grain boundaries over time.
> 
> These processes work very slowly at room temperatures so if these
> effects are audible it would more likely be in the timeframe of years
> not hours. 
> 
> Whether this is audible is whole different can of worms. 
> 

Of course it isn't audible.  

Such effects, assuming they exist at all (and I would expect they are
so completely swamped by changes in temperature, air currents,
humidity, not to mention furniture, curtain position, pets, bends in
the cable, ear wax, breakfast, and the phase of the moon as to make
their existence in a real-world cable impossible to ever establish) are
far below the threshold of human perception.


-- 
opaqueice
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