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... I suspect there will not be much difference.
As do I. Twisting is primarily to defend against inductive noise. Given the low frequency of DCC, unless you live close to an AM radio station or have some big motors nearby there's not going to be much to see. Also, such problems are usually transient, and hard-to-impossible to catch and prove. I think I mentioned that my reasoning is from long-ago work in RF systems, especially power supplies in 2-way radio installations, both mobile and base. Loosey-goosey with power leads and control interconnects was frequently a source of trouble, only "proven" by going back in and doing it the right way.Besides, I like how twisted wire bundles handle. Less like spaghetti.
Bob:I also noticed, if I read your color codes, that your bus wires, black and red, are very very close to each other, which effectively is the same result as twisting. So perhaps the question should be keeping the bus wires next to each other in some manner or another, or keeping them far apart or...Kind regards,Bill
Bob:Like you, I use ME code 40. I have been using 22 gauge feeders to the bus wire, but much more frequent than most. Because I think it is logical to assume that code 40 rail has less capacity than larger code rails and all my locos have sound - and what the heck it can't hurt. So every rail has a feeder, regardless of length, and if the section is longer than a piece of rail, it gets more than one feeder.What has been your experience with feeders and how frequently you drop a feeder to your bus?Kind regards,Bill