I am trying to understand the physics (audio principles ) behind an observation / condition I have found to exist in my system. I recently experimented with shotgun style - vs- biwiring of my B&W 804s driven with the 4BSST. I found that biwiring the speakers with a set of cables, created with no more than monster speaker wire, dramatically increased overall speaker performance and clarity. In particular the bass was "punchy" you could discern the percussion of the kick drum.
Based on a review in the absolute sound I decided to experiment further and made a set of biwire cables utilizing 10ga 4 conductor copper cable. The bass response seamed to increase over the monster cable bi-wires. However since connecting these cables I could not help but feel the clarity of the bass had diminished. So feeling that the cables need to "burn in" I have left them in the system. They have been in place for approximately one month.
Last night I disconnected them and reconnected the monster cable homemade bi-wires. All the clarity is back. Bass is punchy but not as prevalent. I tested the cables resistance with a Fluke multimeter and got readings for both cables of approximately 0.1 ohms, this is not what I was expecting. I thought I would see a larger difference between the two cables, which would provide some insight to what was actually happening.

I was experimenting with homemade biwiring before purchasing. I have been contemplating the 9ga Bryston speaker wire and was going to biwire but am concerned the muddy bass issue may reappear.
Any logical / technical insight on this would be appreciated. I am aware of all the philosophical BS regarding cables and am not trying to go there .............. need audio / physics insight as to how the amp and cabling are interacting.
My main objective here is to get as much of the clarity / accuracy the Bryston & B & W equipment can produce, and is known for.