Thank you guys for your input. I will let you know once I am done with building cable.
Can one use assymetric wire gauge for speaker cable construction?
Hello,
I am trying to build a DIY speaker cable, but while doing so I have one question that needs to be answered. I am using a cable which is essentialy made up of multuple individually insulated cables of smaller gauge.
So can I use more strands for the positive wire & lesser strands for negative wire, essentially an asymmetric gauge design. But length of both positive & negative wires will be same (and between left & right channel).
Can someone please help me answer this question?
Regards,
Saurabh
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- 18 posts total
Jmho, a power cord, cable, would be a bad choice. Especially if the power cord is UL Listed. If UL Listed as a rule the insulation, dielectric, covering the conductors is rubber or PVC... Not good for carrying audio signals. Also as @oldhvymec pointed out shielding is not a good idea. It can suck the air from the music. . |
There is one caveat pertaining to asymmetric cables and that is they DO NOT work well with amplifiers that adopt a balanced symmetrical differential design. i.e. - where both speaker output terminals carry the same signal, but 180 degrees out of phase This style of amplifier REQIES prefect symmetry between both +ve and -ve conductors - i.e. wire type, gauge, insulation type and cable geometry There are several amps that use this approach and the list appears to be growing quite fast - but at this point in time they tend to be higher end products. Here are a few
Regards - Steve |
- 18 posts total