eraos said:
You're saying the AC is only a carrier of the audio signal?
Not like a mailman carrying a letter from one place to another. I'd say copper wire is the carrier of the signal. Signals are information. The information is AC voltage that corresponds to audio. It's easy to confuse. The AC signal is kind of like "One if by land, two if by sea". The fact of a lamp signalled an invasion. The number of lamps told what kind.
The AC signal voltage says "message arriving" in a form your gear can understand. The characteristics of that voltage determine the content of the message.
For instance, if you play a 100hz tone into a mic, it will output a 100hz AC voltage. If you play a 500hz tone into it, it puts out a 500hz AC signal.
So it's the information that is important. Gear passes info using variable AC. Mics turn audio into variable AC. Speakers turn AC into audio.
And sometimes, copper wire isn't the carrier. This is part of what I was getting at with the loop concept.
You know about transformers? A transformer is two pieces of wire wrapped around each other. One is the input, one is the output. They don't touch, they are insulated from each other. Yet if you put an AC voltage through the input wire, voltage with the same frequency comes from the output.
In a mic transformer, the input wire is hooked to the + and - of the mic capsule. The output wire is hooked to the + and - of the XLR connector.
So the mic diaphragm and connector are not physically connected in any way, yet the information passes. What happens is this: When a voltage passes through a wire, an electromagnetic field forms around it. When you talk into a mic, the capsule generates a signal voltage. It passes through the transformer input wire, making a field. This field varies with the signal voltage, which varies with your voice. If you put another piece of wire next to the first, this field will induce an exact copy of the signal voltage in this second wire. This is connected to the XLR connector. This principle is called induction. A voltage on the primary (input) induces a like voltage on the secondary (output).
Then the mic is connected to a pre, and the whole process happens again. Different AC loop, same info passed along.
So the information, in the form of an AC signal voltage, has been passed on to another piece of gear, even though the original AC signal is bouncing back and forth along it's little loop in the mic.
In this case, the medium of information transfer was an electromagetic induction field in a transformer.