Speaker wire strand count

C

Chris

Guest
I'm thinking of buying some 12 gauge speaker wire & was hoping someone
could tell me if the strand count is important. The info is as
follows:

0.20mm*65C*2F

(65 strand, not 259 strand)

PVC jacket: 4.0*8.0mm

I have no idea what any of this means. Is the 65 strand count
detrimental? I would think there'd be less resistance because there's
less surface area, although the wire would be stiffer.
It costs $17.99 Cad. for 50ft.

Thanks,

Chris
 
Chris:
Nothing to be concerned about....... either will work just fine.
By the way..... unless you are using a 1000 watt amp driving speakers
located over a long distance.... say 100 feet or more..... 12 gauge is
over-kill, big and hard to handle, inflexible, and the ends will not fit
into standard speaker terminals without pin adaptors or pigtails.
Usually 16-2 zip cord will work just fine... available at any hardware
store. I have also been able to find 14-2 zip cord that is used for
outdoor low-voltage lighting..... works great..... and who cares about all
the hype about the strand count or whether or not it is Oxygen free copper,
or double bi-radial wound, braided, special dielectric etc, etc...... we
are just running speakers here.
--
Best Regards,
Daniel Sofie
Electronics Supply & Repair
-------------------------


"Chris" <cb_cgNOSPAM@hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:si9psvgsje69ddi22e9aunnqp8fuqmk6nv@4ax.com...
I'm thinking of buying some 12 gauge speaker wire & was hoping someone
could tell me if the strand count is important. The info is as
follows:

0.20mm*65C*2F

(65 strand, not 259 strand)

PVC jacket: 4.0*8.0mm

I have no idea what any of this means. Is the 65 strand count
detrimental? I would think there'd be less resistance because there's
less surface area, although the wire would be stiffer.
It costs $17.99 Cad. for 50ft.

Thanks,

Chris
 
On Tue, 2 Dec 2003 07:54:37 -0800, "Sofie" <sofie@olypen.com> wrote:

Chris:
Nothing to be concerned about....... either will work just fine.
By the way..... unless you are using a 1000 watt amp driving speakers
located over a long distance.... say 100 feet or more..... 12 gauge is
over-kill, big and hard to handle, inflexible, and the ends will not fit
into standard speaker terminals without pin adaptors or pigtails.
Usually 16-2 zip cord will work just fine... available at any hardware
store. I have also been able to find 14-2 zip cord that is used for
outdoor low-voltage lighting..... works great..... and who cares about all
the hype about the strand count or whether or not it is Oxygen free copper,
or double bi-radial wound, braided, special dielectric etc, etc...... we
are just running speakers here.
Thanks. I'll check th Home Depot. I've got a Harman Kardon AVR325
(50W x 7 & binding post terminals) & I have to run the surround
speaker wires around the room, so the run is about 40-50ft.

Chris
 
You can save a few bucks by buying 50 or 100 foot extension cords
at the discount stores. Look for the cords that use the 12 gauge zip
cord and
have the "triple" outlet blob at the end. I have found these to be the
cheapest
per foot compared to the bulk zip cord wire. Compare prices before you
buy.

-Bruce


Chris wrote:
On Tue, 2 Dec 2003 07:54:37 -0800, "Sofie" <sofie@olypen.com> wrote:

Chris:
Nothing to be concerned about....... either will work just fine.
By the way..... unless you are using a 1000 watt amp driving speakers
located over a long distance.... say 100 feet or more..... 12 gauge is
over-kill, big and hard to handle, inflexible, and the ends will not fit
into standard speaker terminals without pin adaptors or pigtails.
Usually 16-2 zip cord will work just fine... available at any hardware
store. I have also been able to find 14-2 zip cord that is used for
outdoor low-voltage lighting..... works great..... and who cares about all
the hype about the strand count or whether or not it is Oxygen free copper,
or double bi-radial wound, braided, special dielectric etc, etc...... we
are just running speakers here.

Thanks. I'll check th Home Depot. I've got a Harman Kardon AVR325
(50W x 7 & binding post terminals) & I have to run the surround
speaker wires around the room, so the run is about 40-50ft.

Chris

-----= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =-----
http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World!
-----== Over 100,000 Newsgroups - 19 Different Servers! =-----
 
"Sofie" <sofie@olypen.com> writes:

Chris:
Nothing to be concerned about....... either will work just fine.
By the way..... unless you are using a 1000 watt amp driving speakers
located over a long distance.... say 100 feet or more..... 12 gauge is
over-kill, big and hard to handle, inflexible, and the ends will not fit
into standard speaker terminals without pin adaptors or pigtails.
Usually 16-2 zip cord will work just fine... available at any hardware
store. I have also been able to find 14-2 zip cord that is used for
outdoor low-voltage lighting..... works great..... and who cares about all
the hype about the strand count or whether or not it is Oxygen free copper,
or double bi-radial wound, braided, special dielectric etc, etc...... we
are just running speakers here.
Uck..... Now you've opened a can of worms. :)

--- sam | Sci.Electronics.Repair FAQ Home Page: http://www.repairfaq.org/
Repair | Main Table of Contents: http://www.repairfaq.org/REPAIR/
+Lasers | Sam's Laser FAQ: http://www.repairfaq.org/sam/lasersam.htm
| Mirror Site Info: http://www.repairfaq.org/REPAIR/F_mirror.html

Important: The email address in this message header may no longer work. To
contact me, please use the Feedback Form at repairfaq.org. Thanks.
 
The higher strand count will be more flexible, and probably more expensive.

Bill K7NOM
Sofie wrote:

Chris:
Nothing to be concerned about....... either will work just fine.
By the way..... unless you are using a 1000 watt amp driving speakers
located over a long distance.... say 100 feet or more..... 12 gauge is
over-kill, big and hard to handle, inflexible, and the ends will not fit
into standard speaker terminals without pin adaptors or pigtails.
Usually 16-2 zip cord will work just fine... available at any hardware
store. I have also been able to find 14-2 zip cord that is used for
outdoor low-voltage lighting..... works great..... and who cares about all
the hype about the strand count or whether or not it is Oxygen free copper,
or double bi-radial wound, braided, special dielectric etc, etc...... we
are just running speakers here.
 
I like the higher strand counts because there is more probability of one of
those strands finding its way to where it does not belong and resulting in
another need for amplifier repair. Doesn't everyone know that Monster Cable
is just a NESDA project?

:)

Leonard Caillouet


"Bill Janssen" <billj@ieee.org> wrote in message
news:Vcazb.161$mv4.149@news01.roc.ny...
The higher strand count will be more flexible, and probably more
expensive.

Bill K7NOM
Sofie wrote:

Chris:
Nothing to be concerned about....... either will work just fine.
By the way..... unless you are using a 1000 watt amp driving speakers
located over a long distance.... say 100 feet or more..... 12 gauge is
over-kill, big and hard to handle, inflexible, and the ends will not fit
into standard speaker terminals without pin adaptors or pigtails.
Usually 16-2 zip cord will work just fine... available at any hardware
store. I have also been able to find 14-2 zip cord that is used for
outdoor low-voltage lighting..... works great..... and who cares about
all
the hype about the strand count or whether or not it is Oxygen free
copper,
or double bi-radial wound, braided, special dielectric etc, etc......
we
are just running speakers here.
 
"Leonard Caillouet" bravely wrote to "All" (03 Dec 03 07:46:51)
--- on the heady topic of "Re: Speaker wire strand count"

You're such a cynic! But it's quite true as it happened to me this week.
It resulted in fireworks when a fine strand found its way across the ac
line. The equipment fuse didn't even blow but one could clearly see the
charred remains of the explosion.


LC> Reply-To: "Leonard Caillouet" <lcailloNOSPAM@devoynet.com>

LC> I like the higher strand counts because there is more probability of
LC> one of those strands finding its way to where it does not belong and
LC> resulting in another need for amplifier repair. Doesn't everyone know
LC> that Monster Cable is just a NESDA project?

.... Resistance Is Futile! (If < 1 ohm)
 

Welcome to EDABoard.com

Sponsor

Back
Top