It's not really so much of it being a concern because I assumed around 160 - 180 pf of tonearm cabling, both internal and external when I rewired the arm. That was based purely on the Canare spec of 162pf per meter, between two PAIRS. I didnt thing about that at the time. But after doing some reasearch, and as the more detailed Mogami specs seem to indicate, it appears that capacitance is much lower between individual conductors. Measuring with the capacitance meter appears to confirm it. So, from what I am reading and measuring, it seems that the capacitance of quad cable is only high between pairs, or conductors to shield. Not high between individual conductors. I would like confirmation on this from the cable experts, but that's what it seems to me from what I can gather.
I wired the arm with a small awg teflon insulated stranded wire internally, then soldered to the Canare quad inside the tonearm base. The arm tube ground, arm base ground and the quad's shield are all tied together inside the arm base along with an external ground wire. The canare quad is splt at the RCA end into two pairs for left and right. One conductor to RCA plug pin and the other to RCA plug shield at each, L and R, RCA plug. An individual braided shield covers each pair from the split to the plugs but is NOT connected at the RCA shields. If the shields were connected at the RCA plugs then obviously there could be issues with noise AND the capacitance would probably also be quite a bit higher (again, from what Im reading). Then of course, the seperate ground wire connects at the Seduction ground lug. So what I really have is about 100pf of cable capacitance (measured) and about 60pf for Seduction. So, 160pf total, not the 220 - 240pf that I had originally assumed.. Most of the vintage MM carts that I have want about 200pf and up, depending on the cart. The Shure M97 Im currently using wants, I think, 200 - 300pf. It sounds fine, there likely isnt going to be much difference between 160pf and 200pf in terms of response.
Basically, Im just trying to understand the Quad cable in regard to capacitance. It has a reputation for being high C type of cable but again, I think it really depends on how it's wired.
Thanks Grainger.