If you are interested in a different option, check out Silversmith Audio. https://silversmithaudio.com/fidelium-cables/ . No need to purchase bi-wire cables as their bi-wire adapter will do the trick. Very nice sounding.
If you are interested in a different option, check out Silversmith Audio. https://silversmithaudio.com/fidelium-cables/ . No need to purchase bi-wire cables as their bi-wire adapter will do the trick. Very nice sounding.
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Auxinput is right on the main point...better to go with single wire WT and upgraded jumpers than RH Combo, but wrong on the detail about how AQ works in the Folk Heros range...the Combo is in fact a pair of Zeros and a pair of Bass in parallel. True, their lesser bi-wire cables are made the way he describes. |
At first they sounded a little rolled off to my ears but I let them play and tried them in a few different systems to get a handle on them. Then I got more of a handle on the sound. Good soundstage, mids and bass. So for the value they were very good. I own a more expensive pair now to go with my Vandersteen 5As and maybe Model Sevens soon. |
BTW i have a set of now ancient AQ Type 6 in a shotgun biwire configuration that have literally 25 k miles on them…i loan them out so people can experience a true shotgun solid core biwire cable…. i lost count but 7-8 audiogon members have tried them… @bigkidz Peter might comment. Right now they are somewhere in Michigan…. Best to all jim |
winning vs learning…. pretty much any AQ wire can be configured in a true external biwire configuration, including a factory shotgun biwire configuration…and yes, they cost 2x. I don’t recommend an internal biwire configuration, not for AWG reasons, but because it negates MUCH of the advantage of biwiring which is to get the HF wire 3-4” away from the expanding / collapsing field of the LF wire. |
tomic604 stated this:
I believe he is recommending using two sets of speaker cable for speakers that have 4 binding posts. You can definitely connect multiple speaker wires to the amp side. Either you double-stack two spades or you use one spade and one banana. On the speaker side, one "normal" speaker cable is attached to the top binding posts and one for the bottom. You are still buying two sets of speaker cable. |
Most Audioquest speaker wire are comprised of 4 wires for RED+ and 4 wires for BLACK- (the low end products such as Rocket 33 use 3 wires or 2 wires for each RED/BLACK). When they do the bi-wire on a speaker cable, they just take 2 wires for each banana/spade connection. The core 13awg speaker wire is the same. You just are splitting the speaker wire "in half" for bi-wire option. If Audioquest really doubled up on the bi-wire option, the price of the "bi-wire" version would be over TWICE the price of the normal version.
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Yes. Both @ctsooner @gdnrbob have the better AQ after hearing both. 15’ is a significant performance hit, no matter the cable - i am sure you are aware. Yes the AQ can and should be two sets of cables, so no concern about awg. hope this helps, enjoy the journey and the music. Rutan at @audioconnection can demo both. jim |
I would not use a Audioquest bi-wire speaker cable. Their cables are excellent design, but they are normally just 13awg or close to 12awg cables. When you do the bi-wire option, you are just splitting that into a 14.5awg + 15.5awg cable. I would recommend using a non bi-wire cable and connecting it to the top (tweeter) binding posts. If you don't like the jumper block between the binding posts, then get a high quality jumper cable. You lose current capability if you bi-wire an Audioquest speaker cable. There are other speaker cables which are fine bi-wire. These are cables that are 8awg to 10awg to start with. |
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