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Inside a chassis and/or on a circuit board - use solid wire.It's easier to work with and it stays put.
What about for the RCA & XLR ins & outs? Same smaller gauge?
I'm going to build a phonostage. What would be better to use, solid or stranded wire and why?
As vinyl cartridges use very low level signals, maybe you would consider this below:
Hawksford's analysis was fully debunked many years ago. The test setup was improperly done, parasitics were ignored, and he used magnetic steel wire within the test yet ignored it's permeability and the consequent hundredfold increase of internal wire inductance.Jn
Hi;OK, thanks for your input. Could you clear what is the recommended wire so for power tubes amps??The outputs are big triodes (GM70 or 805).Thanks
The current is not large, the impedance of the circuit is high. Use whatever you want, it really isn't going to impact the circuit operation. Nor is stranded/unstranded, unless your going into rf. Just make sure the insulation is capable of the voltage, temperatures, and bending radius of the layout, and that the conductor is capable of the currents. Other than the physical aspects of the application, insulation material is NOT going to make a difference.Most people do not realize that a wire in air will have the conductor voltage on the surface of the insulation, so there is NO dielectric charging. It's mainly air.Cheers, jn
From the opposite side, I don't have any solid core wiring anywhere in my system. Even my loudspeakers are wired internally with the same wire used in the rest of the system. The preamp and amplifier use a mix of 14ga. and 12ga. stranded wire. Here are images of my preamp showing how it's wired. Here are some pictures of how my power amp is wired. Notice in particular that all of the input wiring is kept separate and not bundled together. This greatly reduces capacitive coupling between the sources feeding the preamp thus helping to preserve channel separation and preventing crosstalk between sources so you don't hear the FM radio while listening to the CD player.Scotty