Lak,
Thank you so much for your thoughtful response!
To answer your question about the Vampire plugs, the fact that they are a side-entry design is causing some major cable management problems at the back of my amp. I have a Unison Research Nuovo, which has a nice bi-wiring option by having 8 rather than 4 speaker wire terminals. Also, I should note that the 8 runs of wire are being used in conjunction with a roller-block style isolation system on the amp. This means that the side-entry design of the Vampires adds a lot of pull and strain on the roller block setup by tugging on the amp. For these reasons, I feel that the rear-ported design of the Furez plugs offers a cleaner approach and allows me to better use my Furutech cable lifts to manage the speaker cables at the back of the amp.
The funny thing is, that I got one or two of the wires to fit the Furez plugs on the first couple tries, but for the life of me, I don't know what twisting technique brought about success. Could have been that length of these particular stripped ends hit the sweet spot.
Interesting also that Take Five Audio in Canada offers terminated Mogami wire in a true bi-wire configuration into slender multi-contact bananas, so I imagine that they have a workaround for what appears to be double the size of my current problem!
The final though is that the Furez are crimp-style and hence very pliable, so I could look into enlarging the hole before adding the wire and crimping.
Thank you so much for your thoughtful response!
To answer your question about the Vampire plugs, the fact that they are a side-entry design is causing some major cable management problems at the back of my amp. I have a Unison Research Nuovo, which has a nice bi-wiring option by having 8 rather than 4 speaker wire terminals. Also, I should note that the 8 runs of wire are being used in conjunction with a roller-block style isolation system on the amp. This means that the side-entry design of the Vampires adds a lot of pull and strain on the roller block setup by tugging on the amp. For these reasons, I feel that the rear-ported design of the Furez plugs offers a cleaner approach and allows me to better use my Furutech cable lifts to manage the speaker cables at the back of the amp.
The funny thing is, that I got one or two of the wires to fit the Furez plugs on the first couple tries, but for the life of me, I don't know what twisting technique brought about success. Could have been that length of these particular stripped ends hit the sweet spot.
Interesting also that Take Five Audio in Canada offers terminated Mogami wire in a true bi-wire configuration into slender multi-contact bananas, so I imagine that they have a workaround for what appears to be double the size of my current problem!
The final though is that the Furez are crimp-style and hence very pliable, so I could look into enlarging the hole before adding the wire and crimping.