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for interconnects you'll want to use many strands of finer magnet wire...
Yes, it's all a mystery if you ask me. There is a definate ''different'' sound of solid core versus stranded - that I know for certain within my boundary of experience.Dielectrics are bad news........I think we can settle on that one being accepted by most of us? Where there is an interesting factor that comes in to play with my ''vintage'' solid core magnet wire is that I have been recently advised that it would have been coated by SHELLAC varnish when it was made all those years ago - that's a fact as I was shown an old tin of it and I immediately recognized the smell and appearance.So, modern magnet wire, depending on application, temperature etc. is coated ususally with three layers of Polymer film : POLYURETHANE, POLYAMIDE,POLYESTER........all plastics?This is a far cry from natural resin ''shellac'' as a dielectric. I have not compared the modern coatings to the old ones. There may be a difference, there may not be.......who knows. I still maintain that the sound of solid copper wiring is unique and superior to any stranded stuff I have heard before.
I used anticables for my first audiophile speaker wire. It was better than RCA zip cord speaker wire from Home Depot. The price was right and the testimonials were convincing. I liked it for a year. But when Carlman came to help with problems with ringing and shouting he said his system did than when he had magnet wire. Replacing them solved the problems for me. Maybe your old copper wire has different metallurgy than Anticable which uses Japanese Ohno copper (I think), or maybe it's a better match to your amp and speakers than it was for mine. Which was a small tube amp driving a low impedance speaker, maybe the high current demand and wimpy amp exacerbated the problem.
I've tried anti cable and other gages of mag wire in various configurations... basically I agree with richidoo, it can sound good at first, but over time you might notice issues. For example the anti cable produced an off tone in my system that took me a few weeks to notice. Some instruments, esp. strings, just had this unrealistic strange tone to them. My theory is that mag wire vibrates, and adding damping might help. I also used to think stranded wire was inferior, but the Woods patio cable and a star quad made of 20 gage mil-spec wire (silver plated copper in teflon) proved me wrong there. They are both better than mag wire and a couple cat5 braids I made. Honestly, I'm not sure what to think of speaker wire anymore, the only conclusion that I've come to is I seem to like lower inductance, so the star quad works well for me. This configuration seems to get rid of some harshness I've found in zip cord type wires.
Magnet wire for speaker cable? I think it's totally goofy. First as already mentioned, it's very stiff. That can lead to a host of oopses, from wires pulling out of connectors to wires poking my eyes out. Secondly, if you braid them, you are going to add some capacitance to them and that maybe the sound change you hear, not better, but different. And some of you are trying cat-5 wire? Why? it's not a good gauge for speaker wire applications, especially at longer runs. What is wrong with some good ole' 16, 14 or if you insist, 12 awg multi-strand speaker wire? I bet you couldn't tell the difference in a blind AB test. Yes, I tried magnet wire, I thought the stiffness was reason alone to forget it.I think everyone is looking for a magic pill that will suddenly open the systems soundstage into some glorious explosion of sound, based on nothing more than opinion and hope.Wayner
Thank's Ray, I do appreciate your candor! Magnet wire is made from copper and that's good. We need to conduct those electrons, dammit! However, the other horseplay with the wire takes it out of the loop for me. I'm not against it, I'm not in favor of it.I'm starting to sound like a politician.....Oops, that's political.Never mind.Wayner