(i appreciate this type of cable is slightly cheaping out, but on the whole now I have 4 core x 4mmsq cable you could run over with a tank, and then this stuff. I dont seem to have hit middle of the road on correct spec.

I haven't made any cables yet Bruce.Bruce Weldy wrote:...you're bound to have an end laying around somewhere, right?
That's the sort of thing I wanted originally, but at the sell-off I was checking out, they'd run out of the nice 2 core stuff and I ended up kind of impulse buying (over the bloody phone - should've hung up) the 4 core, for 2 reasons: (1) heavy duty (and now I know it, heavy weight), and (2) there'd been a discussion on here about using all 4 cores from a margin of safety point of view at the time I bought my cable. Ultimately the law was given that 2-core is all that is needed, but I had wavered off the straight and narrow by that point.Michael Ewald Hansen wrote:I know you already got cable, but if you need some really nice high quality 2 core cable, this is really nice:
http://www.audiospares.com/product.php? ... 705&page=1
Why such heavy guage? 16 guage is more than enough to handle runs of 17 meters or less for the tops. I keep finding it on clearance at my local home supply big box store.Charles Jenkinson wrote:...cheap 12 gauge speaker wire...
I'm with you on all of this except I use 14ga for cables 10ft long and below. Saves a bit of weight for the short runs.Bruce Weldy wrote:I use 12ga rubber-jacketed Rapco speaker cable for every speaker - subs, mains, monitors. They are all interchangeable and I've got plenty of 'em. Build 'em yourself and the expense isn't too bad.[/i]
bahahaharacertomtom wrote:"Buy once cry once" only applies to drivers. Not plywood, amps, rack cases, trucks and trailers and certainly not input and output cables. Right?
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