Night and day speaker connection


I made a great move since I have had always my speaker connected my speakers in BiWire configuration with Biwire speaker cable.  So,  I connect the two red speaker wire to the (+) to the "bass speaker binding post" via a banana plug. I did the same with the two black speaker wire to the (-) "bass speaker binding post" via a banana plug. The result is realy astonishing ! I would never go back to biwire connetions.  But you must use a good quality jumper, to link the two black speaker binding post together and the two red speaker binding post together . I can not stop listening now... to my new reveal music collection.


audiosens

As mentioned, some loudspeaker cables can be wired/connected in internal biwire configuration, which effectively halves the awg going to each post.  Connecting both leads to one post might be called internal shotgun.

What remains to be seen is this: if you got another set of cables, and doubled them up too on just the single posts + jumpers (external shotgun), vs. connecting to all 4 posts (external biwire).

@millercarbon - Just because a) you can’t hear it or b) don’t like what you hear, does not mean it is not audible or an improvement.

Please see http://ielogical.com/Audio/CableSnakeOil.php/#BiWire and read on about different jumper configurations.

When I switched to Kimber BiFocal-XL from another bi-wire, the veils, pace, etc...

As ALWAYS YMMV. Appreciation is system and listener dependent.
I Tri-wire my ushers. I have a single speaker wire coming from the amp to the bass module. I then use a biwire speaker cable from another set of binding posts on the amp that hooks up the midrange and tweeter. My old setup was using the same single wire to the bass module then using a single 3’ Synergistics Research wire from the bass module to the midrange input then using a 8” jumper from the midrange to the tweeter.
My current tri-wire setup is much more simple and sounds better.