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Has anyone experienced positive benefits from biwiring their speakers? I am thinking of trying this with my Ushers but wanted to get some feedback first. I'm looking to replace my wires anyway, so I thought I might give it a try.
With my speakers it did make a difference. Focus Audio FS688 monitors. Ran them at least 4 different ways.Bi-wirecable to tweeter with jumper to mid/basscable to midbass with jumper to tweeterand all of the above configurations with the jumper connected between the (-) grounds only.The two differences I noticed were more air in the highs and a more coherent balance top to bottom. It wasn't major but it wasn't subtle either. I took the inexpensive way out because I wasn't tota ...
So has anyone done any tests comparing the use of 2 separate wires vs. 1 wire with twice the cross-sectional area? I'm wondering if it is simply the extra metal available for signal transmission that is the real difference.
I did, a few years ago, when I had several loudspeakers at home for testing.
After about two weeks of experimenting, I could not name one instance when biwiring helped any, assuming only I used decent cross sections (i.e. with enough metal to carry the required signal properly).
Quote from: DVVI did, a few years ago, when I had several loudspeakers at home for testing.Thanks for the info, DVV! Just for the sake of completeness, can you list any of the speakers and components you tested with?
DVV, thanks for the detailed response, and I applaud the rigor with which you perform your tests. I don't suppose they were double blind tests too?
I'm used to looking at bandwidth in a high performance computing environment, but I'm not very familiar with it in an audio cabling sense. Do you have any good links to pass along?Thanks again!