Audio Banter

Audio Banter (https://www.audiobanter.co.uk/forum.php)
-   uk.rec.audio (General Audio and Hi-Fi) (https://www.audiobanter.co.uk/uk-rec-audio-general-audio/)
-   -   Biwiring (https://www.audiobanter.co.uk/uk-rec-audio-general-audio/1219-biwiring.html)

Ian Molton January 12th 04 01:57 PM

Biwiring
 
On Mon, 12 Jan 2004 14:23:03 +0000
Nutter wrote:

My personal expenice is that Bi-Wiring my Tannoys to my Denon AMP made
a MASSIVE difference. Much clearer mid and treble and tighter base.


I'd put money on any audible difference being down to the cabling itself, not the fact the speakers were bi-wired.

--
Spyros lair: http://www.mnementh.co.uk/ |||| Maintainer: arm26 linux

Do not meddle in the affairs of Dragons, for you are tasty and good with ketchup.

Tim S Kemp January 12th 04 08:10 PM

Biwiring
 

Would always TRY bi-wiring speakers to see if a difference can be
heard. I do not believe that a blanket statement of bi-wiring makes no
difference or bi-wiring will always sound better us true. I believe
that like most things in a home cinema set-up its depends on all sorts
of factors not limited to but including the type of cable, speakers,
amp and room layout.


Even just running twice the cables between sets of single terminals will
improve the sound due to the halving of the cable resistance and increase in
system damping factor.

My speakers are biwired, as the sub is currently on a passive x/over so I
don't want that crossover in line with my tweeters. There is a marked
difference in quality this way. Running without the sub there is a minimal
but noticable difference.




Tim S Kemp January 12th 04 08:10 PM

Biwiring
 

Would always TRY bi-wiring speakers to see if a difference can be
heard. I do not believe that a blanket statement of bi-wiring makes no
difference or bi-wiring will always sound better us true. I believe
that like most things in a home cinema set-up its depends on all sorts
of factors not limited to but including the type of cable, speakers,
amp and room layout.


Even just running twice the cables between sets of single terminals will
improve the sound due to the halving of the cable resistance and increase in
system damping factor.

My speakers are biwired, as the sub is currently on a passive x/over so I
don't want that crossover in line with my tweeters. There is a marked
difference in quality this way. Running without the sub there is a minimal
but noticable difference.




Jim Lesurf January 13th 04 01:00 PM

Biwiring
 
In article , Tim S Kemp
wrote:

Would always TRY bi-wiring speakers to see if a difference can be
heard. I do not believe that a blanket statement of bi-wiring makes no
difference or bi-wiring will always sound better us true. I believe
that like most things in a home cinema set-up its depends on all sorts
of factors not limited to but including the type of cable, speakers,
amp and room layout.


Even just running twice the cables between sets of single terminals will
improve the sound due to the halving of the cable resistance and
increase in system damping factor.


Erm.. I think that the amount of damping is also affected by the series
resistance of the actual loudspeaker unit(s). Once this value is noticable
larger than that of the cables, then changing the resistance of the cables
should not really have much effect upon damping.

There may be some small changes in the overall frequency response, though.

Slainte,

Jim

--
Electronics http://www.st-and.ac.uk/~www_pa/Scot...o/electron.htm
Audio Misc http://www.st-and.demon.co.uk/AudioMisc/index.html
Armstrong Audio http://www.st-and.demon.co.uk/Audio/armstrong.html
Barbirolli Soc. http://www.st-and.demon.co.uk/JBSoc/JBSoc.html

Jim Lesurf January 13th 04 01:00 PM

Biwiring
 
In article , Tim S Kemp
wrote:

Would always TRY bi-wiring speakers to see if a difference can be
heard. I do not believe that a blanket statement of bi-wiring makes no
difference or bi-wiring will always sound better us true. I believe
that like most things in a home cinema set-up its depends on all sorts
of factors not limited to but including the type of cable, speakers,
amp and room layout.


Even just running twice the cables between sets of single terminals will
improve the sound due to the halving of the cable resistance and
increase in system damping factor.


Erm.. I think that the amount of damping is also affected by the series
resistance of the actual loudspeaker unit(s). Once this value is noticable
larger than that of the cables, then changing the resistance of the cables
should not really have much effect upon damping.

There may be some small changes in the overall frequency response, though.

Slainte,

Jim

--
Electronics http://www.st-and.ac.uk/~www_pa/Scot...o/electron.htm
Audio Misc http://www.st-and.demon.co.uk/AudioMisc/index.html
Armstrong Audio http://www.st-and.demon.co.uk/Audio/armstrong.html
Barbirolli Soc. http://www.st-and.demon.co.uk/JBSoc/JBSoc.html


All times are GMT. The time now is 08:54 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
SEO by vBSEO 3.0.0
Copyright ©2004-2006 AudioBanter.co.uk