You would be hard pressed to find better speakers than Fidelium by Silversmith. I replaced $6000 cables with 8’ of them for $1200.
the old cables are now junk.
the old cables are now junk.
Your favorite OCC speaker cable
Hilde45, you can find it in rolls also but I believe you can buy it by the foot. I got a 25 foot roll years ago on line. It looks imposing but it is really not hard to terminate. You really should have one of these https://capritools.com/shop/precision-wire-stripper/ There are a lot of wires to strip and they are teflon insulated. Teflon is tough stuff. If you do get the wire let me know and I will review with you how this is best done. You will also need to have a soldering iron and preferably a heat gun to shrink tubing. |
@hilde45 The phrase "internal bi-wire" refers to having the four bi-wire conductors (HF/MF pos and neg, and LF pos and neg) encased in one cable compared to bi-wiring using two separate cables that each have a single positive and negative conductor, in which case you would need two of those cables to bi-wire a speaker with four binding posts. Each HT Pro 9 series cable has four internal conductors, each with multiple, individually insulated wires. The Pro 9 series also uses multiple wire gauges and a different aggregate gauge for two of the internal conductors compared to the other two. The two smaller conductors are for the HF/MF posts and the larger conductors for the LF posts when the cable is used internally bi-wired. The Pro-9 series cables can also have two of the four conductors connected together at both ends, with a single pair of connectors at each end. That is how mine are configured and so I use two independent Pro-9+ cables to bi-wire my speakers rather than a single cable that is internally bi-wired. The Pro-9 series cables are the same whether used as a single-wired cable or internally bi-wired with the only difference being the number of terminations at the speaker end. You could purchase the cable you linked and re-terminate the speaker end with two connectors (instead of four) and they would work great for your speakers. |