Why do you think Bi-Wiring improves the sound ?


I now know of 3 people that have converted their speakers to be bi-wired but are not bi-amping .

What is your experience or opinion on why bi-wiring without bi-amping might or does sound better ?

I am concidering converting my speakers but I do not want to be fooled by the addition of increased AWG .
vair68robert
Maybe biwiring is akin to the color of your favorite car?  I have my tried bi-wiring with my Sonus Faber Venere 3.0 because I purchased bare wire with 4 wire construction and I had the banana clips on hand to wire up the neighborhood.

At the time I had a NAD C375 BEE and I hooked tested single wiring versus biwiring with one set hooked up to speaker A and one set to speaker B.  I thought the sound from the biwiring was fuller - akin to the old days of turning on the loudness button.

My next test was to biwire from the Speaker A terminal and the sound was identical.  I moved and decided to try Blue Jean Cables and purchased the internal bi-wire configuration and have been happy with the my sound even as I upgraded my equipment to a McIntosh preamp and amp set-up.  

In the end I have a choice - to enjoy listening to music or aspire for 11 to magically appear on the volume knob.  While I'm open to magic, I'm enjoying the music.
So Alan Shaw says it doesn't matter and Richard Vandersteen says it absolutely matters. Two very respected speaker designers with completely different views of the same subject. Do you just cherry pick one because it supports what you believe or fits your experience? What a logical fallacy. I would not add a set of binding posts to a set of speakers just to try it out. If there are already two sets of binding posts, give it a try for yourself and make your own decision.
The crossovers in your speaker virtually split your cable into multiple cable of different frequency bands. Unlike the speakers themselves through mechanical non linearities and Doppler induced IM distortion or amplifier non linearities creating IM distortion, cables don’t have those mechanisms, certainly not within many orders of magnitude of anything else in the system. Resistance is not a non linearity so it does not contribute to IM distortion. As mentioned previously other than increasing gauge, makes no difference. Bi amping can reduce IM distortion which can justify multiple terminals.


I don’t believe or not believe either, I work on the soundness of the arguments and I have yet to hear a solid argument other than increased gauge for biwiring. If you are purposely trying to change the frequency response with cables then it would be easier with a biwiring setup, but cables make poor tone controls.
Do you just cherry pick one because it supports what you believe or fits your experience?

I only bi-wire when I'm using speakers that have that capability. I will say that if the straps are gold plated brass, you should replace them with some good wire or the Cardas copper straps.
"So Alan Shaw says it doesn’t matter and Richard Vandersteen says it absolutely matters. Two very respected speaker designers with completely different views of the same subject. Do you just cherry pick one because it supports what you believe or fits your experience? What a logical fallacy. I would not add a set of binding posts to a set of speakers just to try it out. If there are already two sets of binding posts, give it a try for yourself and make your own decision."


There are several problems with your post. First, assuming that you were responding to my post, I didn’t cherry-pick anything. I simply reproduced some posts of Shaw’s that explain his position.

Secondly, can Vandersteen actually demonstrate HOW it matters? Shaw explains why, in his view, it doesn’t, and is typically rigorous in his scientific approach to such matters. That doesn’t mean that he cannot be mistaken about something, but it does mean that he can explain, with a scientific foundation, why he holds a particular position.

With a quick search, I found anecdotal claims by Vandersteen that bi-wiring sounds better on his speakers, and this:

Additional experiments with a Hall Effect probe revealed that high-current bass frequencies created a measurable field around the wires that expanded and collapsed with the signal. We believe that this dynamic field modulates the smaller signals, especially the very low level treble frequencies. With the high-current signal (Bass) separated from the low-current signal (Treble) this small signal modulation was eliminated as long as the cables were separated by at least an inch or two. (To keep the treble cable out of the field surrounding the bass cable.)

Note that he says "We believe...". Not exactly hard science, though perhaps he is on to something.

I found a related article (on "qacoustics" UK) with some experiments appearing to support the ides that bi-wiring confers benefits. Don, a regular and knowledgable contributor to the audiosciencereview.com site had this to say in response:

Because a single wire carries woofer and tweeter current; bi-wiring means the woofer wire carries only woofer current, tweeter wire tweeter current, though voltage is the same for both. A plot of voltage would show the same voltage applied to woofer and tweeter (less changes due to wire loss, insignificant in practice).

Single wire:
Amp -> single cable -> woofer + tweeter = single cable carries all current

Bi-wire:
Amp -> woofer cable -> woofer = woofer cable carries only woofer current; crossover reduces tweeter current to woofer

Amp -> tweeter cable -> tweeter = tweeter cable carries only tweeter current; crossover reduces woofer current to tweeter

The crossover makes the woofer look like a higher impedance to the tweeter cable so tweeter current is reduced in the woofer wire, and likewise the tweeter crossover makes a higher impedance to the woofer cable for tweeter current, so there is less interaction in the wire. The net energy the amp delivers, and that the woofer and tweeter each receive, is the same whether you use a single wire or bi-wire. The wire itself contributes negligibly to distortion and so the bi-wire argument is a red herring (is a false argument). The amplifier and speakers dominate (by orders of magnitude) the distortion.

HTH - Don

And another commenter on a different site:

QAcoustics article cited above shows just how SUBTLE the differences can be between Bi-Wire and Single Wire connected Speakers. Change in IMD Levels are only 1-3 dB, with the IMD voltages being 70 dB below the Fundamental Signal Levels...which is 1 part in 10^7 or 0.00001 %.....probably impossible for even Golden Ears to detect.

If someone has a scientific explanation for why bi-wiring may be superior in practice, please do provide it.