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
twoleftears.  OK what you mean, if I double or add to my speaker wire, that I had already modified from a bi wire with  a single wire. Do I would use the same speaker post with banana and spade using my Jumper ?  So two cables on the same post, so twice much current as my first modification into single wire, and 4 times more curent as the initial bi wired speaker cable ?  It is not cheap, but if it worth to try, and it would give more improvements...  Thank's
@audiosens — here’s something else you can try. Leave your cables hooked up in a traditional bi-wire configuration, then put your jumpers in as well. Chris Sommovigo (Black Cat) recommended this to me, and now I will not listen without his jumpers along with my shotgun bi-wire AZ Satoris. Bass tightened up and there’s an added sense of space, transparency, and dimensionality that I can’t live without. Not sure how this would compare to what you’re doing now, but as Doug so rightly says, you won’t know until you just try. And it’s also obviously free.

And now, the coup de grace, are you ready? There is a superior option better than what you just did. It would involve four pair of speaker cables, yes, double bi-wired.

I sense a new product idea in the making — a quad-bi-wired cable that comes wrapped in a fire hose! C’mon, you know you want it. Heh heh.

I recommend searching shotgun + speaker on the forum and reading some of the threads.  There can be pluses and minuses.  Depending on the current awg and the resulting awg if you double up.  If you know the awg of your cables, there are simple calculators on line that can tell you what the resulting awg would be if doubling the run.  But there can also be resistance problems.  If you buy and don't like, it can be costly, but if you can find a way to experiment, it could be worth it.  Basically, but connecting both parts of your internal biwire cable to one set of terminals, you've already done a kind of internal shotgun.  Be aware that connecting two wires of the same awg does not come close to doubling the awg--see on-line calculator for how this works.
What is the point? Doing so completely negates the rationale behind bi-wiring.

All that is happening is a slight tone change is effected, but the woofer signal will still contaminate the uppers.

See http://ielogical.com/Audio/CableSnakeOil.php#BiWire and Bi-Wiring Bridging below.