Biwire done correctly is about two things:
the larger field from bass signal can be moved to a different set of wire and physically spaced ( 4” is a good place to start ) so that field does not modulate the HF signal. The second thing is the crossover in the speaker extends back to the amp from an electrical perspective. Many listeners and competent speaker designers provide biwire provisions for a reason.
you have more options to explore in hooking up your system. ( and learning to discern Sonic differences ) For example just doubling up the biwire and using jumpers and listening…. You should also experiment w that second set of preamp outs - you are betting all your sonics on the quality of filters iMO implemented in your sub.
have fun
enjoy
jim
the larger field from bass signal can be moved to a different set of wire and physically spaced ( 4” is a good place to start ) so that field does not modulate the HF signal. The second thing is the crossover in the speaker extends back to the amp from an electrical perspective. Many listeners and competent speaker designers provide biwire provisions for a reason.
you have more options to explore in hooking up your system. ( and learning to discern Sonic differences ) For example just doubling up the biwire and using jumpers and listening…. You should also experiment w that second set of preamp outs - you are betting all your sonics on the quality of filters iMO implemented in your sub.
have fun
enjoy
jim