Richard, I've got a better understanding of what you were trying to do with the coax. What I described earlier would not necessarily apply to a single-ended amp design.
I was under the impression that coax was being used in some fashion as a replacement for speaker wire. I saw another thread about someone doing this. I was trying to point out that this can cause an RF short circuit to appear at the amplifier output at certain frequencies, and this could be very bad for the equipment. I was assuming that most people are using amplifiers that have floating balanced outputs meant to have the load across the +/- outputs. Most home and auto equipment I've seen is like this. I didn't think bipolars were used much anymore. Perhaps there's some nostalgia for bipolars just like for tubes.
If you are trying to do impedance matching of speakers, you've opened a can of worms. You've got a passive compensation network with the cable, and R-C at the speaker terminals. Were you looking at the transient voltage response at the speaker terminals? If so it might be that what you have done isn't necessarily a good thing. It is the current in the voice coil which should be optimized for transient and frequency response. Just interested in how you know that what you did was good, besides going by what it sounded like.
To add to one of your other comments -
the engineers knowledge can be a double edged sword. It can help you reason out an event but if you are not careful it can also prejudice one against an event with out actually testing the hypothesis of that event in a real world setting.
I think the prejudice comes from hearing the reasons given as 'fact' for when something, like expensive speaker wire or power conditioners, are touted as an amazing miracle for improved audio (or video) quality. What I'm learning here is:
1. There may be perceptible changes in audio/video quality but there are often other scientific explanations for those changes. And understanding what actually happened may offer an alternative which is far less expensive or easier to do. This unravels the black magic and snake oil claims behind a lot of this stuff.
2. Engineers should be open-minded about claims of improved or changed performance, but that does not mean accepting the given reasons behind those claims. Especially if those claims are from the equipment manufacturer. They are in the business to make money.
3. It really takes someone with good engineering background and an active interest is audio/video/home theater to figure it all out. That's what's needed to sort out the truth from the BS. So how many people out there do we have like that? Probably not too many ...
emc guy