...it can cause tremendous currents to be reflected back down the line ... I theorize that in audio circuits this also happens, causing a sort of 'comb filtering'.
My point. Besides: anytime you press a signal (electricity) through a component like a resistor or capacitor, you will get time delay, compared to the same signal passed through a straight piece of wire. Is there any argument about that? If you now press that same signal through two paralleled devices of vastly different storage capacity, you inevitably incur phase shift, i.e. different time delays generated by the two capacitors. Any argument about that?
Kai, we're not talking about phase shift of one freq vs. another, it's the voltage vs. currentphase shift that causes distorted waveforms.
...Once I tested a Mitsubishi 32 track digital recorder with an all passive 10th order 48k hz low pass filter to avoid Nyquist frequencies.