@KenM10759 @Kvn_Walker Thank you both very much. (I like the college remark, Kvn, fortunatelly I still live in a country where good students get non refundable scholarships, and my nephew is a real A-student).
I wasn't concern about sound quality, but for some, unfounded obviously, reason, I thought that if speaker wire touches both binding post and the wire that continues to the next pair of posts, that it would represent a heavier load. I can't shake that feeling however irrational it may be. I still have a feeling that two wires for each speaker going all the way from the amp, represent a heavier load.
Thank you for setting me straight. I don't really need jumpers, but wanted to make everything neat for my nephew. Then I decided to terminate cables myself, but first attempt went south when I couldn't find nice budget spades. I still intend to give it a try, but I'm getting connectors second hand. Screw all this 50$ for four spades.
The speakers are rated 6ohm and I didn't know will this give hard work to the amp. Not that it should, but I was overcautious.
In the end it all sounds pretty good for a 260$ budget. My ears needed some break-in time after my speakers, because everything from this budget now sounds broken and thin... as if one driver is not working at all.
I will say this; shame on Monitor Audio for hyping those numbers. No bass comes from these boxes compared to far more conservatively rated KEF's. I had to push for bass, turn up all knobs and there was still very little. I raised it in the Dolby sound processor, I raised it on the amp Bass knob... very little and a funny thing; there was a rather small sweet spot
for bass. Which shouldn't be the case. But as soon as you raise your head 4 - 5 inches higher than the tweeter, bass would dim noticeably.
When sitting in the right place and not asking for bass, they played very nice. Now that I have two pairs of speakers at home for instant comparison, I could easily detect what is, I believe, described as softer sound. My impression is that the midds are milder, not accentuated and this gave the feeling of a softer sound. Highs are not that "crystal" either, so it's easy to leave the speaker on for a long time.
This is not the sound I would go after. Lows often sounded "nasal". Like someone with a cold when speaking.
Knock test was not all that quiet. But the end result is nice and the faults I listed are not very pronounced.