Quick post to let you know about my good experience biwiring my RM30Ms. There were some posts on this a few years back, but the general gist of those seem to be that the primary advantage to biwiring was that you could select cables that were optimized to the high or low frequencies. This isn’t what I did. Rather, I used two sets of basically identical cables, but nevertheless found that my VMPS speakers respond much better to biwiring than any of my previous speakers.
I’ve tried to biwire a few times in the past, before I had VMPS speakers, and I never found much improvement at all. This time, I did it totally as a lark, since I had just made a new set of cables in anticipation of eventually getting second amp for biamping.
Really, really sweetened up the mids for me. Also, much blacker background and much better depth layering. Basically no change in the bass.
Since I wasn’t really expecting an improvement, I went back and forth a bit comparing it to the single wire, and the benefit was obvious. Even my disinterested wife, who didn’t know I had made any changes, commented on how good the stereo sounded.
I’m not gonna say that it was “jaw dropping” or other such hyperbole, but I will say that it had a profound impact on exactly the part of tuning a lot of audiophiles obsess about—getting rid of the glare in the upper part of the presence region while not losing any musical information.
For me, this was enough of an improvement to provide at least a temporary cure to my upgraditis and just enjoy my system for a while.
I don’t really know why biwiring worked so well for me this time, when it had previously been such a waste of time. Maybe it has something to do with the fact that the ribbon array is such an easy load, while the megawoofers are so hard to drive?
Associated components are described here:
http://cgi.AudioAsylum.com/systems/1245.html