Hi guys,
Sorry I missed this thread until now. I'm in one of the areas that the Sandy messed up and the power and internet have been down. Gary gave me a heads up about it, but I'm just getting to it now.
About battery and motor wires. Given the general placement of the esc in fairly close proximity to the motor, and the fact the motor also has a few inches of leads, I rarely get complaints about the motor leads. Motor leads can be extended without any problems anyway.
I have from time to time gotten complaints that the battery leads are too short. I went to Jason years ago (the ZTW guy) asking to have mine longer and he told me that the ZTW engineers were adamant that the distance between the battery and the ESC's capacitors must be no longer than 300mm (12") or so. Most battery leads are about 100-125mm, so the ZTW guys throught they could stay within a margin of safety by making their ESC leads 100mm. I later found out on rcgroups in a big thread (called "long battery leads kill esc's") about the science of why: ripple voltage, voltage spikes, inrush current etc. In cases where long battery leads are a must (like on twins or when using a big 12S harness), many advocate installing supplemental capacitors like the Castle CapPack, or just roll your own with the appropriately sized Caps.
But, from ZTW to you guys: 12 inches from the Lipo pack to the Caps is max spec for wire distance without extra methods to protect the Caps. It really is no bearing on the caps' quality- it's just the science of producing AC current from a DC source. Think of the plumbing in your house. When you turn off a downstairs tap real fast, all the water in the pipe suddenly stops and the mass cases the pipes to bang against the joist. The ESC is switching the current from full off to full on at a kHz rate all the time! If you put alot of "water" in that pipe, it will eventually blow out a valve.