View Full Version : Bi-wired vs conventional.
A. Vivaldi
01-15-2004, 06:43 AM
<font color='#000000'>What do those here at Audioholics think about bi-wired speakers vs conventional? Does bi-wiring offer superior sound quality?</font>
Rip Van Woofer
01-15-2004, 09:30 AM
<font color='#000000'>Bi-wiring enables the dealer to sell you twice as much overpriced cable.
See the '10 Biggest Lies' article on my Webpage (address in signature).</font>
RX-V2400
01-15-2004, 09:07 PM
<font color='#000000'>I just bi-wired my Yamaha NS-555's and I can not hear any difference.</font>
<font color='#000000'>Ive never tried it before. Is bi-wiring the same as bi-amping? Or is it just running 2 sets of wires from the same output?</font>
<font color='#000000'>Rip;
I really love this article. Are you the author? If so, perhaps you would be interested in republishing it on Audioholics?
http://bruce.coppola.name/audio/TenAudioLies.pdf</font>
<font color='#000000'>Outstanding. I'm not an EE, but have an extensive electronics background & yet have found myself, at times, nearly falling for a lot questionable logic when it comes to audio setup. Especially wiring. I have always understood that providing a path of least resistance is the surest way to get a signal from pt. A to pt. B. w/o excess degradation. For wiring speakers, I use a finely stranded (for workability), 10 gauge wire. The only precaution I use is to try to avoid running them parallel with any AC wiring as this could cause a humm in the speakers due to induction.
I dont have any top-of -the-line equipment but I'm not using absolute crap either. So far,I haven't found the need to spend excess $ on cabling or wiring to achieve quality audio/video. It's great that there is a forum such as this that one can learn about (and thus dispell) some ruses that await us when searching for our audio/video nirvana( at least the best that we can afford).
Thanks Audioholics & all contributors.</font>
Rip Van Woofer
01-19-2004, 10:55 AM
<font color='#000000'>Gene -- PM'd you. I'm not the author.</font>
<font color='#000000'>Thanks Rip, I got that. Too bad you're not the author <img src="http://www.audioholics.com/iB_html/non-cgi/emoticons/sad.gif" border="0" valign="absmiddle" alt=':('> I would love to add those articles to our cable data base. Perhaps I will at least link to your website. You have great content there!</font>
goodman
01-19-2004, 04:28 PM
<font color='#CCCCCC'>Thank you, Rip, for the tip on Peter Aczel, and the articles he writes for the Audio Critic. What do you guys, particularly Gene and Rip, think of Richard Hardesty, formerly of Wide Screen Review, and his Audio Perfectionist Journal?</font>
<font color='#000000'>I recent purchased a pair of Cambridge Soundworks Towers on closeout (under $800 for the pair plus the matching Center Stage)- an amazing deal at the price.
I've been reading up on the cables, and if I'm understanding, a high quality zip cable such as Sound King is about as good as anything. *I happened to have about 50 ft. of quality 12 ga laying around and thus was able to bi-wire at no cost. *I can't speak to how good they might sound with just straight connections, but if your speakers are bi-wireable, and considering that it really costs very little to do it, I figure that it does no harm, and might do some good. *I would not have considered the ability to bi-wire a deal breaker when speaker shopping however.
I've never heard anything that might indicate that bi-wiring would degrade the sound.*
I would never consider spending $200 for a commercial bi-wire assembly.
I have to admit that even with my low end Onkyo receiver, these speakers sound very good indeed. *I might mention that I grew up listening to live classical music, love jazz, and have auditioned a number of high end speakers including Paradigm (my first choice for a speaker upgrade, until the Tower deal came along) and B&W's- and would consider these Towers to be in the class. *My next major purchase will most likely be the Yamaha RX-V2400, as I have a difficult room (a loft with an irregular shape), which should likewise make them sound even better.</font>
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