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#7044 - 12/29/02 06:48 AM Do it yourself speaker cable
snortimer Offline
Deputy Gunslinger

Registered: 12/29/02
Posts: 1
Loc: Prescott, AZ
Has anyone tried making this Cat-5 speaker cable? I am interested in everyone's opinion.

http://www.venhaus1.com/diycatfivecables.html

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#7045 - 12/29/02 11:07 AM Re: Do it yourself speaker cable
desperado Offline
Gunslinger

Registered: 09/06/02
Posts: 213
Loc: Hawaii
I can't give any first hand opinion however I have a collegue at work that swears by his self made Cat-5 cables. He did mention that he cut his hands up pretty good braiding the wires. Too much work for my tastes.
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Desperado - 1050 Owner - Reviews - Harmony SST-659 Remote

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#7046 - 12/29/02 05:11 PM Re: Do it yourself speaker cable
fmcorps Offline
Gunslinger

Registered: 06/06/02
Posts: 197
Loc: Fargo, ND, USA
I've built it and tried it and switched back to 12ga monster cable.

It took me about a week for an 8ft braider length (two weeks total for the complete project.) I tried it in my system for a good two weeks and decided that the 12GA sounded better...which was a huge dissapointment given the amount of time I spent on it.

However...I've heard a number of people who've built it swear by it. Maybe it's just my gear...I don't know.

Anyway, that's my 2 cents on the issue.

Jason

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#7047 - 12/29/02 11:06 PM Re: Do it yourself speaker cable
desperado Offline
Gunslinger

Registered: 09/06/02
Posts: 213
Loc: Hawaii
I suspect that after spending such effort to make cable by hand few people will admit that it didn't work. That gives more weight to fmcorps's input in my opinion.
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Desperado - 1050 Owner - Reviews - Harmony SST-659 Remote

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#7048 - 12/30/02 08:42 AM Re: Do it yourself speaker cable
tx_outlaw Offline
Deputy Gunslinger

Registered: 09/10/02
Posts: 12
Loc: Houston, TX, US
I made the cables for front and center about 3 years ago. As one of the above posters mentioned it was very time consuming and rough on the fingers (i had blisters for a week!!)

Did they sound better? Yes, of course I was replacing cheap lamp cord.

Would I do it again? No, as a matter of fact I recently replaced them when I upgraded my system (950/770, Rocket Speakers).

I found some very reasonable cable from a company called Canare, which was originally intended for microphones (i think??) Anyway, a couple of other groups I read swore by it. I have been very pleased as well.
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#7049 - 12/30/02 11:18 AM Re: Do it yourself speaker cable
obie_fl Offline
Gunslinger

Registered: 12/20/02
Posts: 194
tx_outlaw - Do you have more specifics on the Canare cable you used or perhaps a link describing the method? Did you order the cable directly from Canare?

Tom
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#7050 - 12/30/02 12:10 PM Re: Do it yourself speaker cable
soundhound Offline
Desperado

Registered: 04/10/02
Posts: 1857
Loc: Gusev Crater, Mars
Canare is a well known manufacturer of cables and connectors etc for the pro audio/video industries. Their stuff is widely used to wire up movie dubbing stages and recording studios. I use their RCA plugs extensively - they're very good and reasonably priced. If you do a search on the web, you'll get to them.

[This message has been edited by soundhound (edited December 30, 2002).]

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#7051 - 12/30/02 12:13 PM Re: Do it yourself speaker cable
soundhound Offline
Desperado

Registered: 04/10/02
Posts: 1857
Loc: Gusev Crater, Mars
Canare is a well known manufacturer of cables and connectors etc for the pro audio/video industries. Their stuff is widely used to wire up movie dubbing stages and recording studios. I use their RCA plugs extensively - they're very good and reasonably priced.

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#7052 - 12/30/02 01:25 PM Re: Do it yourself speaker cable
obie_fl Offline
Gunslinger

Registered: 12/20/02
Posts: 194
I'm very familar with Canare and have several of their cables, but use them as interconnects. I was wondering which of the Canare cables people are using for speaker wire.

Tom
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My Home Theater Web Page

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#7053 - 12/30/02 04:57 PM Re: Do it yourself speaker cable
MrSandman Offline
Gunslinger

Registered: 04/20/01
Posts: 128
Loc: Charlotte, NC, USA
4S8 & 4S11.

S.

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#7054 - 12/31/02 04:12 AM Re: Do it yourself speaker cable
Paul J. Stiles Offline
Gunslinger

Registered: 05/24/02
Posts: 279
Loc: Mountain View, CA, USofA
I'll give the CAT5 speaker cables a try as soon as a can get hold of some good quality cable.

I don't want to use the plain white jacketed stuff. Somewhere I saw some purple CAT5 cable that had NASA grade or NASA approved written on it. If I can find some of that, then I can have some NASA grade speaker cables.

I have electrostatic speakers (Acoustat 2+2s up front, 1+1s in the back) which have extremely low impedance (capacitive) above 10kHz and so the low inductance of the braided CAT5 cables may give some sonic benefit.

In the case of the 2+2s, my modifications include seperate inputs for the LF and the HF transformers, so I can further experiment with CAT5 type cables on one or both of the inputs.

Anybody have a recommendation on what would be the best terminaton for these CAT5 cables?

Paul

------------------
the 1derful1

[This message has been edited by Paul J. Stiles (edited January 01, 2003).]
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#7055 - 12/31/02 12:57 PM Re: Do it yourself speaker cable
MCH Offline
Gunslinger

Registered: 02/14/02
Posts: 128
I think the crucial part for any cable is the pureness of the copper and adequate gauge for the length of the run. The hyperbole that has been created in the wire arena is purely market propaganda that seems to have created a nice market. When many dollars or hours are spent I'm sure the listener is straining his hearing in order to justify the effort or cost; in doing so will probably hear things they did not pay attention to before. You can't fool scientific double blind tests. Many have been done and listeners repeatedly have failed to tell differences between cables.
Save your money and buy some music.

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#7056 - 12/31/02 04:54 PM Re: Do it yourself speaker cable
zacster Offline
Gunslinger

Registered: 11/15/01
Posts: 131
Loc: Brooklyn, NY
There was somebody advertising on Audiogon that was selling what is essentially a DIY cable that looked to be made of the Canare cable with good quality terminations and sheathing. It wasn't badly priced, I think $65 for a 6' pair. I'm considering it myself. Since I've been doing everything else myself lately, including speakers and a tube pre-amp I was going to try making some but it would probably cost as much.

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#7057 - 12/31/02 06:09 PM Re: Do it yourself speaker cable
soundhound Offline
Desperado

Registered: 04/10/02
Posts: 1857
Loc: Gusev Crater, Mars
While I believe the differences in 'sound' between various cables is somewhere around nil, I am a strong advocate of _high quality_ cables, with good gold plating on the contact surfaces. OFC cable is more immune to oxidation than the plain wrap stuff. At the very least, good quality will ward off intermittent connection problems in the future. The Outlaw cables look pretty good in this respect.

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#7058 - 01/01/03 01:11 PM Re: Do it yourself speaker cable
charlie Offline
Desperado

Registered: 01/14/02
Posts: 1176
I'll have to once again put my lot in with the 'hound, with the caveat that the famous CAT5 cables might sound different simply due to excess capacitance or something. If so this would fall under the 'distortion' rather than 'improvement' category though.
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Charlie

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#7059 - 01/02/03 01:28 AM Re: Do it yourself speaker cable
fmcorps Offline
Gunslinger

Registered: 06/06/02
Posts: 197
Loc: Fargo, ND, USA
I'm in agrement with you two.

When I went from the 12ga to the Cat 5's soumething sounded muted. That's all I can realy say. It just sounded like something was muted. Went back to the 12ga and everything sounded "right" again. The differance was simmilar from when I went from an 18ga to the 12ga with the gold expanding bannana clips. Some people wouldn't notice a differance, but given the amount of time that I listen to my system...I can tell if something is off, and if something has changed and brings more clarity and detail into the mix.

Like I said, I still cant put my finger on what the differance was, all I know is that something sounded "off" when I used the cat5's.

However I am debating working with a dual 16ga design for bi-wiring that uses a teflon-tape wrap as in insulater.

[This message has been edited by fmcorps (edited January 02, 2003).]

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#7060 - 03/03/03 08:04 PM Re: Do it yourself speaker cable
Anonymous
Unregistered


I finally finished making 7' pair of Cat 5 cables for my mains a week ago. They still need more break in time but it has already shown my time spent was worth it. For total of $50 including nice spades and banana plugs, I could not ask for more. Of course, you can spend more (a lot more) and get a better pair but if you are looking for a value, this is hard to beat. I have Vifa A/V kit speakers from Madisound which are said by other consumers to be superior to many consumer grade speakers costing up to $1,000 for a pair and this Cat 5 cables bring out a lot of good things from my speakers. For those who say "not notice the difference" may be because of the speakers they have. I used to have a pair of JBL N-38 which are decent speakers for the price but I could not notice the difference when I was testing different quality interconnects. I did the same test while using my Vifa A/V speakers, and there it is! Quality interconnects do make differences in clarity, detail and the dynamics (pardon me if my terminology is less than par, I'm not an acoustical engineering major). So do the speaker cables. Think of it this way, if a person driving a Honda Accord which is a decent car for the price, decides to put a set of tires that are made for Ferrari and expect Accord to accelerate like Ferrari will be in for a disappointment. On the other hand, if a Ferrari owner decides to use a set of average tires from say, a department store which I doubt any Ferrari owner will, that person is not making the most out of that fine car. What a waste of time that will be. Its about the compatibility and fine tuning.

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#7061 - 03/03/03 09:09 PM Re: Do it yourself speaker cable
charlie Offline
Desperado

Registered: 01/14/02
Posts: 1176
It's quite possible that the cat5 cables have measurably different characteristics than typical 12 gauge copper. Given that 12 gauge copper is close to the theoretical ideal you can draw your own conclusions.
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Charlie

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#7062 - 03/20/03 04:48 PM Re: Do it yourself speaker cable
bestbang4thebuck Offline
Desperado

Registered: 03/20/03
Posts: 668
Loc: Maryland
Here is an idea I am getting ready to use ...

There are two ideas behind most exotic speaker cable: reduce overall resistance, reduce reactive effects. Without going into all the reasons, the solution is to provide good quality conductors sufficiently separated, and not have a current conducted continously down the center of the current pathway. My choice is as follows:

I'm putting in pairs of Belden 8281 video cable for each speaker. The resistance of the sheilded braid is on the order of 1.1 ohms per 1000 feet. That means that a fifty foot speaker run would use 100 feet of cable, there and back. Cable resistance becomes about 0.1 ohms between amplifier and speaker. I am not using the center conducter of the video cable. That way, back EMF concentrated in the center conductor has no where to go and will not 'fight' with the desired current.

The problems introduced are physical ones. The cable will not flex as easily as normal speaker cable. The ends must be stripped back, the sheild pulled back and the center conductor cut off, then protected with small diameter heat shrink. Then the shield braid, without the center conductor and its insulation, is too thick to be used in some banana plug connectors or amplifier/speaker posts. I'll use banana connectors that can accept large cable. To restore insulation and appearance, I plan to use heat shrink on the modified ends right up to the banana connector.

While some effort will be required to make the cables 'speaker ready,' it is much less effort than braiding foot after foot of CAT-5 cable for long speaker cable runs.

What do you think, people?


[This message has been edited by bestbang4thebuck (edited March 22, 2003).]

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#7063 - 03/20/03 05:32 PM Re: Do it yourself speaker cable
charlie Offline
Desperado

Registered: 01/14/02
Posts: 1176
Two thoughts come to my mind. First, it's a pretty creative idea, and hats off for that. Second, you're fixing something that's not broken, but if it makes you happy, great.
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Charlie

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#7064 - 03/21/03 11:00 AM Re: Do it yourself speaker cable
bestbang4thebuck Offline
Desperado

Registered: 03/20/03
Posts: 668
Loc: Maryland
I chose to go the route I have for speaker cables because I love efficiency and fidelity. A short discussion on efficiency, with regard to delivering the watts per channel you bought to the speakers:

In this example, let us assume that we have an amplifier capable of delivering 240 watts to a six ohm (nominal) load, the speaker. But in between the amplifier and the speaker is 100 feet of wire, fifty feet out and fifty feet back. The cable run to the average center and main speakers will be less, the average run to rear speakers may be more. If the cable presents a resistance of 0.1 ohms, the load on the amplifier is now 6.1 ohms. If the resistance of the cable is 0.5 ohms, the load is 6.5 ohms. If the cable resistance is 1 ohm, the load is 7 ohms. In simplistic terms, the higher the total impedance, the fewer watts are output from the amplifier. The higher the cable resistance, the more watts are spent in the cable itself. I have done a large table with a graph on a spreadsheet to see detailed results, but here is a small example:


PW6 - S/C - Wout - Wcbl - Wspkr - Loss

240___6.1___237____4____233______3%

240___6.5___222___17____205_____15%

240___7.0___206___29____177_____27%

PW6 = Potential Watts at 6 ohm load
S/C = Load of Speaker and Cable, ohms
Wout = Watts output by the amp for the load
Wcbl = Watts used within the cable itself
Wspkr = Watts delivered at the speaker
Loss = compared to potential Watts

I know that in decibels, dropping from 240 watts to say 205 is just a pittance. But you know what? If I spend double the money to gain double the watts, as in the Outlaw 770 compared to the new 7100, in order to gain three decibels, I don’t want a significant percentage of that eaten up by the effects of cable resistance. And if you use the new 7100, how much loss would you like? The percentage of loss given above is still valid no matter how many watts per channel you start out with.

Also, keeping the speaker cable resistance to a minimum is critical in order to maintain the damping factor of the amplifier.

Anyway, these are my reasons for extra effort in keeping the resistance between amplifier and speaker to a minimum, within a reasonable budget.


[This message has been edited by bestbang4thebuck (edited March 22, 2003).]

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#7065 - 03/21/03 12:45 PM Re: Do it yourself speaker cable
Unferth Offline
Gunslinger

Registered: 12/31/02
Posts: 148
Loc: Homewood, AL, US
Quote:
Originally posted by charlie:
Two thoughts come to my mind. First, it's a pretty creative idea, and hats off for that. Second, you're fixing something that's not broken, but if it makes you happy, great.


If you didn't fix things that weren't broken there'd never be any progress made

Or you just have to redefine what "broken" means... I'm guilty of defining broken as something less than absolutly perfect... but oh well

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#7066 - 03/22/03 10:16 PM Re: Do it yourself speaker cable
charlie Offline
Desperado

Registered: 01/14/02
Posts: 1176
Copper wire will run about 0.18 ohms for 100 feet (!) of 12 gauge. If you want 0.1 (what you'll get with your coax if I read the post correctly) 10 gauge copper will do that. If you want even less, try 8 or 6 gauge at 0.07 and 0.05.

If you have a really, really, really, long run, maybe consider an amp with balanced inputs and locate it closer to the action....

[This message has been edited by charlie (edited March 23, 2003).]
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Charlie

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#7067 - 03/23/03 11:36 AM Re: Do it yourself speaker cable
stabie Offline
Gunslinger

Registered: 09/21/02
Posts: 93
Loc: Austin, TX US
I'd go with 12 ga wire. I checked Belden's site and the 8251 runs 1.1 ohm/1000'. For 2 wires (back and forth) it will be 2.2 ohm/1000'. I think 12 gauge wire runs 1.6 ohms (or so depending on temp) for a round trip. So I think the 12 ga will actually give a slightly lower resistivity. It's going to be a lot easier to work with too.

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