Gents,
Sorry, I made an error and should have typed "...My familiarity for copper coated wire is with CCS for Coaxial cable for Sat & TV cable feeds...meaning Steel (sorry I was in a rush to get to the Canucks Game - which they lost - bad karma I guess).
I took my brother to the game and he too is a licenced winder (Motors /Generators /Alternators and Transformers - with over 20 years with a GE Service Shop) and I mentioned to him if he'd ever seen CCA in any motor rewound by GE (or even another company he worked for before GE) , and he too has never seen CCA, or ever just Aluminum wire in a Stator of one of these machines. (He currently works for the local utility.)
I spent 10 years selling Motors / Generators / Transformers / Switchgear /Etc., for GE=> from 1/2 HP to 43,000 HP => after my days on the tools, and a decade selling services for them (over 32 years at GE ending in May 2008); and not once was there aluminum wire of any type used in any of them. Aluminum wire is not suitable for this application, and copper is used almost exclusively. Aluminum bars, or cast Rotor windings are very common for single, and three phase, induction motors - but no aluminum in the Stators. One can probably dig up some IEEE papers somewhere (I was a member there for about 13 years) that go into the rationale of wire types and their applications if you'd like to dig deeper. (The 43,000 HP Refiner Motors were such a large load the Pulp & Paper Company had to call 3 utilities before putting them on line.)
I would never bother with any type of Aluminum for a Speaker wire when more robust multi-strand flexible copper cable is cheaply available. Besides aluminum just adds more resistance to the circuit and wastes power - again more so on longer runs for the same cross sectional area.