Yes Rockvergo, I agree all the current passes down the cable. but the high and low frequencies are split at the crossover, not at the amp or the speaker binding posts. I know some say a low frequency signal will follow the line of least resistance, and that this is an arguement for mixing stranded and solid core conductors in the same cable. Hence it would, if this is really true, make sense that the second pair of a bi-wired set (the woofer pair)should be of a larger cross-sectional area (and therefore have greater current carrying capacity?) than the pair going to the mid/treble section. However, many very high quality cables do not do this, eg Nordost for one. And in any case, this could also be applied to the jumper leads.
So my basic puzzlement remains: if the current arriving at the speaker binding post is the same as that leaving the amp - which it is - then apart from the length, aren't the jumper leads simply acting as a second pair of cables in a bi-wired system?
I will check out the sites suggested by Bomarc and Audio_Buff, to see if these articles throw any light on this.
So my basic puzzlement remains: if the current arriving at the speaker binding post is the same as that leaving the amp - which it is - then apart from the length, aren't the jumper leads simply acting as a second pair of cables in a bi-wired system?
I will check out the sites suggested by Bomarc and Audio_Buff, to see if these articles throw any light on this.