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My thoughts are that ya'll are trippin' and this almost certainly makes no difference to model railroad wiring function. Twisting might in some cases reduce RF interference with radio devices, perhaps including model railroad throttles, but I think the effect would be cumulative and only show up on large layouts.
Yes, this is being *SERIOUSLY* overthought (if that is a real word). It is not like this is for some museum-size layout (um, except for Mike's layout, which is in that category). But for an average home layout, IMO all that minutia doesn't' really matter.
A month ago I promised I'd do this. The roundtuit landed on my desk, so here you go: First (left or top) is the signal straight out of the DCS240. Second (right or bottom) is at the end of a 60-foot run of #12 at six twists per foot. Both unterminated. Second shows +/– 1V ringing ahead of the dropoff (trivial) and 14V P-P at worse. I don't see a problem.@John , the example traces in the YouTube vid absolutely have a reactive load in the signal path. Maybe a bare motor somebody is trying to run on 00? All bets are off with that as a baseline. Should that be the case, it would be yet more justification to keep 00 out of one's operating plan.
So what you are showing is that twisting is not really needed to keep the signal clean? That was the original question.
With out seeing the result of 60 feet of untwisted wire, all we can deduce from Mike's comment is that twisting doesn't hurt the signal.I think what the question should be is, does twisting the pair preserves the signal?
No, I was addressing the "snubber" issue from the linked video John posted.