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#1
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Hello! I'm building onto my existing house, and I pre-wired one room
with speaker wire for a "surround sound" effect. (I plan to put a speaker in each corner of the room, and the wires for these speakers are now running inside the completed walls.) Unfortunately, I now realize that my speaker wires are about 3 feet too short, and so they don't extend to quite the right spot in the room where I want to put my audio stack. I _could_ put the stack in the spot were the four speaker wires come out of the wall all together, but -- and this is my question -- would it cause any obvious loss of audio quality to merely _add_ another three feet of speaker wire between each short wire and the back of my stack by just "splicing" the ends of the wires together (that is, by twisting them around each other and wrapping them in electrical tape)??? Your opinions will be greatly appreciated. (Oh, and FYI, this won't be a super-expensive colossal audio system . . . just a medium-grade system meant to sound "good" to an average, ordinary listener . . . in other words, I'm not an all-out audiophile, but I do care a fair amount about sound quality.) Thanks! Shane |
#2
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"CajunUSA" wrote in message
om Hello! I'm building onto my existing house, and I pre-wired one room with speaker wire for a "surround sound" effect. (I plan to put a speaker in each corner of the room, and the wires for these speakers are now running inside the completed walls.) Unfortunately, I now realize that my speaker wires are about 3 feet too short, and so they don't extend to quite the right spot in the room where I want to put my audio stack. I _could_ put the stack in the spot were the four speaker wires come out of the wall all together, but -- and this is my question -- would it cause any obvious loss of audio quality to merely _add_ another three feet of speaker wire between each short wire and the back of my stack by just "splicing" the ends of the wires together (that is, by twisting them around each other and wrapping them in electrical tape)??? The preferred method of splicing speaker cables usually involves soldering and taping. If soldering is not possible, then twisting the wires tightly and tightly applying proper-sized wirenuts would be your best plan "B". Then tape to ensure that all remains secure. |
#3
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I _could_ put the stack in the spot were the four speaker wires come
out of the wall all together, but -- and this is my question -- would it cause any obvious loss of audio quality to merely _add_ another three feet of speaker wire between each short wire and the back of my stack by just "splicing" the ends of the wires together (that is, by twisting them around each other and wrapping them in electrical tape)??? Three feet of wire would be no problem at all. A twist-and-tape junction _would_ be a problem, eventually if not immediately, due to oxidation of the copper. Don't twist-and-tape. Strip the wires, twist-and-solder, and insulate (tape is OK, but it's much better to slip a piece of heatshrink tubing over the wire before you twist the ends together, solder, cool, slide the headshrink tubing up over the soldered junction, and then heat the tubing with a hairdryer or heatgun to shrink it into place). -- Dave Platt AE6EO Hosting the Jade Warrior home page: http://www.radagast.org/jade-warrior I do _not_ wish to receive unsolicited commercial email, and I will boycott any company which has the gall to send me such ads! |
#4
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Or you could use good quality plugs and sockets or use crimp butt connectors
(even better than soldering) but DO NOT just twist the wires together and insulate; as the connection will soon oxidize and go high impedance. "CajunUSA" wrote in message om... Hello! I'm building onto my existing house, and I pre-wired one room with speaker wire for a "surround sound" effect. (I plan to put a speaker in each corner of the room, and the wires for these speakers are now running inside the completed walls.) Unfortunately, I now realize that my speaker wires are about 3 feet too short, and so they don't extend to quite the right spot in the room where I want to put my audio stack. I _could_ put the stack in the spot were the four speaker wires come out of the wall all together, but -- and this is my question -- would it cause any obvious loss of audio quality to merely _add_ another three feet of speaker wire between each short wire and the back of my stack by just "splicing" the ends of the wires together (that is, by twisting them around each other and wrapping them in electrical tape)??? Your opinions will be greatly appreciated. (Oh, and FYI, this won't be a super-expensive colossal audio system . . . just a medium-grade system meant to sound "good" to an average, ordinary listener . . . in other words, I'm not an all-out audiophile, but I do care a fair amount about sound quality.) Thanks! Shane |
#5
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I _could_ put the stack in the spot were the four speaker wires come
out of the wall all together, but -- and this is my question -- would it cause any obvious loss of audio quality to merely _add_ another three feet of speaker wire between each short wire and the back of my stack by just "splicing" the ends of the wires together (that is, by twisting them around each other and wrapping them in electrical tape)??? That will work until the wires at the joint oxidise a bit. Better to make a soldered joint. Or use some screw-down connectors. |
#6
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Thanks kindly. Looks like soldering is the way to go.
Shane |
#7
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Arny Krueger wrote:
I _could_ put the stack in the spot were the four speaker wires come out of the wall all together, but -- and this is my question -- would it cause any obvious loss of audio quality to merely _add_ another three feet of speaker wire between each short wire and the back of my stack by just "splicing" the ends of the wires together (that is, by twisting them around each other and wrapping them in electrical tape)??? The preferred method of splicing speaker cables usually involves soldering and taping. If soldering is not possible, then twisting the wires tightly and tightly applying proper-sized wirenuts would be your best plan "B". Then tape to ensure that all remains secure. I don't know how this would affect audio quality, but as far as voltage applications go for a car for instance, a good crimp connector properly installed has proven less resistance than soldering. |
#8
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On Sun, 07 Sep 2003 00:33:58 -0500, "WindsorFox[SS]"
wrote: I don't know how this would affect audio quality, but as far as voltage applications go for a car for instance, a good crimp connector properly installed has proven less resistance than soldering. To get a good, gas-tight connection requires production crimpers, not the kind of crimpers that typically come with a kit of terminal lugs. Production crimpers are pretty expensive. If I have to use hand crimpers, I also solder. johnc, the ex-pat US Army, Ret. Saudi Arabia ----== Posted via Newsfeed.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeed.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 100,000 Newsgroups ---= 19 East/West-Coast Specialized Servers - Total Privacy via Encryption =--- |
#9
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Anonymous wrote:
On Sun, 07 Sep 2003 00:33:58 -0500, "WindsorFox[SS]" wrote: I don't know how this would affect audio quality, but as far as voltage applications go for a car for instance, a good crimp connector properly installed has proven less resistance than soldering. To get a good, gas-tight connection requires production crimpers, not the kind of crimpers that typically come with a kit of terminal lugs. Production crimpers are pretty expensive. If I have to use hand crimpers, I also solder. I assume you crimp first. johnc, the ex-pat US Army, Ret. Saudi Arabia ----== Posted via Newsfeed.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeed.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 100,000 Newsgroups ---= 19 East/West-Coast Specialized Servers - Total Privacy via Encryption =--- |
#10
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On Sun, 07 Sep 2003 18:19:24 GMT, CJT wrote:
I assume you crimp first. Umm, yeah. I'm not sure that was a serious question. Then I decided that it doesn't matter. If you are new to this kind of stuff, the answer may not be obvious. My fault. What I should have said was, "First I crimp. Then I solder." johnc, the ex-pat US Army, Ret. Saudi Arabia ----== Posted via Newsfeed.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeed.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 100,000 Newsgroups ---= 19 East/West-Coast Specialized Servers - Total Privacy via Encryption =--- |
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