Mfsoa
I do appreciate that bit of info... I suppose it depends on who you speak with at VSA... AND maybe when... a dealer showed me, or rather told me the method I wrote about above... I called VXA too a bit thereafter on a setup issue and made mention of it to them... I only wrote what both the dealer and VSA had told me and I will remove the other wires driving the speakers shortly and find out for myself once more... its been a while since I checked it
and I do know using one set of bi wires that span only from the top most pair of posts on the bass module to the upper module will significantly reduce the bottom end response. Thats the first way I hooked them up when I got the first set of Syn biwires
and leaving the plates on
Figuring plates are the connection for both drivers, and the biwires not with great enough span to hook to the very bottom and top most posts
I added the other set of wires I had laying about to the very bottom posts, and used the biwires to do the other two posts
I removed the plates at that point too, so as not to cause any shorts
and was instructed to do so by a dealer
and VSA. Not to mention it just made sense
aa with so many others thats what you do when biwiring
remove the plates.
Five sets of speakers that Ive owned in the past have ALL said to do just that when bi wiring, or bi amping. I didnt see VSA as any different. Still dont actually.
What gets me about this recent info is this, "If there is an internal connection of the two bass module drivers... Why then, is there a brass plate on the outside of the bass module apparently connecting those two drivers?" Especially if they are hooked up on the inside. I would think the brass plates on the outside supurfulus, or at the very lezst redundant. Then there's the question,"Why are they there if not to connect two different drivers?"
AS with so many other speakers... brass plates do in fact connect different sets of drivers.... seems silly to do it internally, and externally as well. Dont you think?
It aint just the book that is confusing
.
Brass or Silver plates on backs of speakers have to me, anyways, always been there as a conductor. removing them removes the path for current, or the signal to flow... and current don't flow backwards... so I'm lost if the connecting plates are either redundant or do not serve to connect the two drivers. Am I making sense?
ONe thing about the JR's... Selfexplannatory or even simple, they ain't.