Bi-wiring?


A friend gave me a pair of meadowlark kestrels hotrods. There are 4 post on back of the speakers, 2 for tweeters, 2 for bass woofers. How is bi-wiring done? I have them piggybacked from +tweeter to +bass, -tweeter to -bass. Any harm in wiring them like this? If so, how exactly does one bi-wire? Thanks in advance!
Ddjr
ddjr
You either use one run of speaker cables from the amp and then add jumpers such as


http://www.cardas.com/jumpers.php

Or two identical runs of cables from the amp


https://systems.audiogon.com/systems/7432#&gid=1&pid=2


some people even bi-amp, one amp and cable for each binding post on the speaker. 

Never tried the latter but I will say I prefer the sound of bi-wiring to single cable with jumper.



Bi-wiring works best with lamp cord or really cheap wire. The improvement/cost ratio is pretty good then. Technically its not that good even then, it just feels like a better deal when its only $2 more than when its $200 or $2000 even though in every case its twice as much. As you can probably tell just by the numbers when you start getting into the better more expensive cables it quickly becomes first harder then impossible to get as much improvement from two as you could get by putting the same money into one better cable. 

Don't take my word for it though. Try bi-wire now while its cheap. Then try some really good speaker cables. I doubt you will ever want to go back to the lamp cord.


Best to get the rest of your system straight before worrying about biwiring. One thing I will say is that until you can justify spending money on doubling up on cables, you can get a good benefit from replacing stock jumper plates with some short runs of decent cables to bridge the terminals. I shotgun biwire my speakers and in my situation there is a benefit, but upstream electronics improvements were more impactful on an absolute basis.  Frankly, I'd even get my interconnects and power cords set before addressing the biwire issue.  Just my experience in my system FWIW.