Speaker Wire advise pls
"andy" wrote in message
ups.com...
Keith G wrote:
What I find strange/amusing is that so many speaker manufacturers a)
supply
the necessary terminals and b) state that biwiring is advantageous - they
just telling porkies or do they know summat the 'experts' here don't...??
Speaker manufactures produce speakers in order to sell them.
Can't knock 'em for that, can you? :-)
If the
market wants and will bear the extra cost of biwirable terminals and
crossovers then they will be produced. When enough sales are lost to a
competitor because a speaker lacks the biwirable "feature" then it will
be added since the additional cost is modest. It does not matter what
the manufacturer knows about what is wise or not they are producing for
a market.
Yes, I suspect it's as hard to buy really cheap 'terminal trays' for single
wiring only as it is to buy a 10 Mb hard disk these days...??
Speaker manufacturers had the same problem earlier with cables. Selling
a loudspeaker without cables is inconvenient for customers but selling
loudspeakers with "normal" cables lead to lost sales from the growing
number of people who believed in magic cables. So manufacturers
effectively had to stop supplying cables with their loudspeakers. I
would not be surprised if in a few years time a growing number of
audiophile amplifiers are not sold without power cables for similar
reasons.
Reminds me that the 'captive cables' I've seen on various speakers in the
past were all thinner than bloody fuse wire....!!
What loudspeakers manufacturers choose to say about cables and biwiring
and such is an interesting test of their marketing/integrity. Some
manufacturers keep as quiet as possible on the subject but provide what
the market wants while others actively promote audiophile beliefs.
Also interesting that some high end (ie expensive) manufacturers *don't*
supply bi-wirable terminals....??
(Doesn't affect us FR boys much...!! ;-)
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