Capacitor wire length for tests

Hello,
I do have some speakers I play with. The Crossovers are outside, same channel from the amp, speaker switch.
Main capacitors, 3.3uF (second order) are on the board, additional/bypass capacitors are connected via alligator/wires clips.
Does the length of wires affect the influence of the smaller capacitors to the main ones?
(Longer travel, slow speed of the electrones, late arrival at the main capacitor)
Practically, adding parallel capacitor upto 50% value of the main cap does not produce noticeable sound changes.
It seems to me, in cases the capacitors are soldered, the sound changes (as to be expected). Or it is result of imagination.
Thx
 
You are most likely experiencing expectation bias and easily fooled human senses...that's how magicians make a living. And if you do the math, the velocity of a signal in a wire (barring external influences) is about 70 - 80%-ish of the speed of light, any propagation delays will be irrelevant in conductors that short. A far greater effect will be the resistance, and stay reactance of the wire. The resistance of the wire should be accounted for in the design, and any stray reactance can be generally ignored in a passive crossover as long as the conductors aren't excessively long, say less than 30 cm or so.

Mike
 
To a high degree of accuracy, at audio frequencies the full physics description reduces to lumped parameters like R, L, and C. A rough, general estimate of lead inductance would be 10nH per cm.

Any delay in linear audio circuitry is mostly related to bandwidth. In the region where the frequency response is relatively flat, the phase shift will be small and quasi-linear. And the derivative of linear phase shift is the definition of a time delay.
 
There is the pic
 

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The clips are surely steel and the contacts are dubious as well.
Keep power resistors well separated and raised off the board, to avoid excessive heating.

I tend to tack solder parts for testing that will not be permanent. That also makes them reusable.
You don't have to cut the lead off, just solder at the ends.
 
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