Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Hey all,
Just in the process of finishing my basement and want to run speaker wire through walls and joists. What size of wire is best and are there actually different types? I have 5T Psb speakers and the matching centre. The A/V receiver will most likely be the 110W/channel Pioneer mid-range 914 model and there will be two in-walls in a room about 35 feet from the source. Any help would be greatly appreciated. Thanks, Take Care Tec |
#2
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() "Tecumseh" wrote in message ... Hey all, Just in the process of finishing my basement and want to run speaker wire through walls and joists. What size of wire is best and are there actually different types? I have 5T Psb speakers and the matching centre. The A/V receiver will most likely be the 110W/channel Pioneer mid-range 914 model and there will be two in-walls in a room about 35 feet from the source. Any help would be greatly appreciated. Thanks, Take Care Tec 14 gauge is the most common choice when both quality and economy are a consideration. You have happened on a controversial topic; some would say 16 gauge is adequate for 35 feet, while others prefer exotic solutions. I suggest 14 gauge zipcord, of any brand you may happen across. |
#3
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() Tecumseh wrote: Hey all, Just in the process of finishing my basement and want to run speaker wire through walls and joists. What size of wire is best and are there actually different types? I have 5T Psb speakers and the matching centre. The A/V receiver will most likely be the 110W/channel Pioneer mid-range 914 model and there will be two in-walls in a room about 35 feet from the source. Any help would be greatly appreciated. 35 ft means about 50-60 ft after running with the phone/tv, so you'll need at least 12 or 14 gauge to keep losses to acceptable levels. |
#4
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Tecumseh" wrote in message
Just in the process of finishing my basement and want to run speaker wire through walls and joists. What size of wire is best and are there actually different types? The "one size fits all" speaker wire is 12 gauge stranded low voltage wire sold by home improvment stores. I have 5T Psb speakers and the matching centre. The A/V receiver will most likely be the 110W/channel Pioneer mid-range 914 model and there will be two in-walls in a room about 35 feet from the source. I generally estimate wiring at twice the point-to-point distance, with additional allowance if the route is obviously circuitous or goes up and down walls a lot. It's OK to use standard electrical staples to fasten the wire down where needed. They are U-shaped/ Or, use the fasteners with their own pre-attached nail. If you want a nice-looking job, terminate each end with wall plates with dual binding posts or banana jacks. |
#5
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
I'd use 14 gauge within your HT room and 12 gauge for the run to the second
room. There is no harm - unless your budget is extremely tight - in being conservative and using the heavier 12 gauge throughout. The wire is unlikely to be a significant cost in the overall project. |
#6
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
I always go one gauge heavier than I imagine it would really ever need,
plus there are more attractive and rugged options than the low voltage stuff sold at Home Dopot. I am fond of heater cord but there are several types of wire that are more appealing and longer-lived than the plain PVC stuff. One good source for me has been the cord reels used by vacuum cleaners, vac-sew stores stock replacements if you look around or for smaller lengths you can raid garage sale dead vacs which sometimes have nearly new cords or the vac stores throw out whole cord lengths because the molded plug is bad. Older vacs had a very tough cloth covered cord that is washable, if you scrap the first and last six inches where water may propagate into the insulated wire ends, Of course several days' drying is mandatory. |
#7
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() wrote in message oups.com... I always go one gauge heavier than I imagine it would really ever need, plus there are more attractive and rugged options than the low voltage stuff sold at Home Dopot. I am fond of heater cord but there are several types of wire that are more appealing and longer-lived than the plain PVC stuff. One good source for me has been the cord reels used by vacuum cleaners, vac-sew stores stock replacements if you look around or for smaller lengths you can raid garage sale dead vacs which sometimes have nearly new cords or the vac stores throw out whole cord lengths because the molded plug is bad. Older vacs had a very tough cloth covered cord that is washable, if you scrap the first and last six inches where water may propagate into the insulated wire ends, Of course several days' drying is mandatory. Thanks all.... Even you CALCERISE ;-) Very much appreciated Take Care Tec |
Reply |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Bose 901 Review | General | |||
A wonderful example of arroagance and stupidity from RAHE | Audio Opinions | |||
Speaker Cables and Interconnects, your opinion | Audio Opinions | |||
Speaker Wire & Sound Quality Question | Tech | |||
Solid core copper 18 guage thermostat wire - problems as a speaker wire? | High End Audio |