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So, looking at my amp, my speaker wires head East, right? If I understand correctly, "away from the board" in my case would mean the wires leaving the amp should turn North a bit, then turn toward the posts. Correct? In your image the wires pass longer over the board, heading South. If convenient, please note the page to refer to in the instructions. Very sorry I missed this. I have four more amps to build (three for a friend) so this is helpful.
As you look towards the front panel of your amp your speaker wires should be heading west 'or to the left' on the picture and you're good to go. It's a small detail but an improtant one that was pointed out on diyaudo.com by Bruno a while ago now. You could loop it around with your signal cable also if you could get the signal cable away for the mains imput a little that wouldn't be a bad thing because AC noise enters there. It's not a huge deal but it means you will get as low a noise floor as possible.
I think you misunderstood what Bruno was saying. The speaker wires just need to come out of the same side on each connector on the NC400.
Those are my amps that I built. James does have one issue (I think) that he needs to get the wires going out of the same side.
...If you run the speaker wire out of the left side of the terminal (towards the outside of the NC400) that is mounted on the NC400 it needs to be done on the other terminal as well. Both wires will be going in the same direction...
...James does have one issue (I think) that he needs to get the wires going out of the same side.
...I suppose you'd move the binding posts southward to increase spacing to the mains?...
Doug,I like it. If money was no issue I would have purchased larger chassis. I didn't check to see which was the next larger size.
RE: wiring arrangement. It is important to consider what the wires are carrying. The input wiring is carrying a very low level signal, and as such is more susceptible to interference, of course this wire is shielded and that may help. The speaker wiring is carrying a high level signal, and as such will radiate a fairly large field around it, so it needs to be kept away from both the input wiring, and the module itself.Additionally, the output inductor will radiate a big field, so all wires should be kept away from it.Consider also, that it is likely that the module itself radiates a fair amount of RF, so one should be careful about routing any wiring near/adjacent to the module.IMO, when I build my next nCore amp, I will probably be more concerned with the proximity issues of the wiring, than trying to keep the wiring as short as possible. I will also choose speaker binding posts and speaker wiring which allows keeping a tight twist as close to the terminations at the posts as possible.