Yes it is part of the circuit. WOW what do you think it is a part of?
It actually completes the circuit. What's up with you? If you can't read a schematic, that is a pretty serious handy cap. You had 3 stars going, you lost TWO, go set in the corner and listen for a while.
-----------------
You do not see my point? Off course I know that pr schematic it is counted in or seen as a part as the circuit. My point though is that this is misleading. Leading us to argue like "what`s the point of using heavier speakercables when the voicecoil is made of the thinnest 30awg thread.."
Most of us has looked into a few power amps and mybe noticed how the capacitor bank are connected, either through thick wiring or in bigger amps through massive copper rails. And we know why this is neccesary, there is a large flow of electricity here and we wants it to breath freely.
Breath into what? Your speakers voicecoils.
Example:
https://macrofab.com/blog/super-simple-power-supply-ssps-design-part-3/
It actually completes the circuit. What's up with you? If you can't read a schematic, that is a pretty serious handy cap. You had 3 stars going, you lost TWO, go set in the corner and listen for a while.
-----------------
You do not see my point? Off course I know that pr schematic it is counted in or seen as a part as the circuit. My point though is that this is misleading. Leading us to argue like "what`s the point of using heavier speakercables when the voicecoil is made of the thinnest 30awg thread.."
Most of us has looked into a few power amps and mybe noticed how the capacitor bank are connected, either through thick wiring or in bigger amps through massive copper rails. And we know why this is neccesary, there is a large flow of electricity here and we wants it to breath freely.
Breath into what? Your speakers voicecoils.
Example:
https://macrofab.com/blog/super-simple-power-supply-ssps-design-part-3/