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[ Combining 2 speaker wires together ]

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Old 02-21-2004, 09:45 AM   #1 of 4
Andrew Pezzo
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Combining 2 speaker wires together


I have some extra speaker wire and I would like to try twisting the pair together. I have seen this explained on a website but the link no longer works. How excatly would this be done, is there is special technique to braiding the pairs together? I have some speakers that are biwirable and figured I would experiment since its not going to cost anything. I had been looking into some bi-wired speaker cable but is going to cost a lot for the length I need.

The wire I have is 12 guage but the article I read they were using 14 guage and when combined became 11 guage. What guage would two 12's produce and are there any concerns with such a thick guage?

Thanks.
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Old 02-21-2004, 03:59 PM   #2 of 4
RobertR
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The wire I have is 12 guage but the article I read they were using 14 guage and when combined became 11 guage. What guage would two 12's produce and are there any concerns with such a thick guage?

The combined gauge would be about 9. My speaker dealer did this when he installed my sub. There was no special "trick" to it--he just twisted the wires together and jammed them into spade lugs on one end and bananas on the other.
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Old 02-22-2004, 12:58 AM   #3 of 4
Wayne A. Pflughaupt
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If you want to braid them, secure one end on a bench vice and the other in an electric drill, and run it until you get the desired consistency. However, after you’ve finished it’s best to keep tension on the cable until you’ve released it from the chuck.

Regards,
Wayne A. Pflughaupt


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Old 02-22-2004, 09:44 PM   #4 of 4
Allan Jayne
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Braiding two pairs of 12 gauge speaker wires to feed one speaker is overkill that costs you nothing but money.

To braid two cords together without having them kink up when you release the tension requires twisting each cord by itself counterclockwise at the same time the two are twisted together clockwise. This requires a special braiding machine to hold the two spools which let out the cords little by little as twisting occurs.

Video hints:
http://members.aol.com/ajaynejr/video.htm
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