looking to replace Fyne speaker jumper cable


Hello All,

looking to a upgrade jumper cable to replace the standard one comes with my Fyne F704 speaker, any advise will be really appreciated. 

zensview

Just saw this AudioQuest Dragon BiWire jumpers, not sure about the Dragon jumpers but Dragon power cord sound is pretty damn good.

 

Appreciated everyone, I mean it. So far I’m start to getting a great list for both silver, and copper speaker jumpers

 

SONIC BI-WIRE JUMPER (12 AWG silver-coated oxygen-free copper) $70

 

REVELATION JUMPER CABLE (14 AWG pure silver jumpers) $350

 

Anticables Level 5 jumpers.  Silver AND gold (ACElectrum™ Silver/Gold alloy signal conductors Heavy #11 gauge) $175

 

Duelund no. 3 silver speaker wire (flat annealed pure 99.999% silver ribbon) $45

 

3mm pure silver cable on eBay and fancy Furutech spade and banana plugs from eBay $220

 

AudioQuest Dragon BiWire Jumper (Direction-Controlled Solid Perfect-Surface Silver (PSS))

$695

Look @ bulk solid core Neotech UP-OCC hookup wire and use bare ends (sans connectors).

You can purchase it in either silver or copper with a Teflon wrap (may also be available in cotton wrap).

I've used the solid core copper 22 gauge Teflon for speaker wire, but I prefer smaller gauge (22-26) in single runs of less than 12'.

I've purchased it from a few venders, but only recall Sonicraft  (sp?) right now.

 

DeKay

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

@zensview 

I agree with @dekay . The Neotech wire is as good as it gets in silver or copper. I have used it to rewire 3 different sets of speakers. It is highest quality.

Why would you ever want to run the speaker cables to the woofer terminals and then jumper to the high terminals?  Don't you want the purist signal to your mids and trebles?  And then you want to change to 4-6" silver jumpers serialized with your 8' copper cables to bring on greater treble?  I think you will have to strain very hard to hear any difference by doing this.

If your system is lacking treble extension, fix it at the source of the problem.  Using cables as bandaids to compensate for tonal incoherency is never a good idea.  And there is no guarantee that silver here or anywhere else in your system will fix your problem.  It's not always the wire material, but rather the cable design and implementation.