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9 answers

I'm with dmb on this one. I'm assuming you've got one of those home theaters in a box that comes with 10 feet of small guage wire already attached to the speaker. If you were going to use 24 guage wire for a 50 foot run I would say replace the whole thing, but since you are going the majority of the distance with 14 guage what you want to do will be fine.

2006-08-06 14:50:27 · answer #1 · answered by mrknositall 6 · 0 0

14 Guage wire is quite a bit larger than 24 guage. All eles being equal, the lower number(larger wire bundle) will have less internal resistance and will therefore cause less total signal loss over a run of the same distance. Best to replace the entire length with the 14 guage as if you have any significant amount of power from the amp the internal resistance of 24 gauge could cause a thermal shutdown or other significant problems.

2006-08-06 10:57:54 · answer #2 · answered by Tony the Pony 1 · 0 0

For a noticeably-delicate audiophile music gadget, you are able to listen the version in a lengthy run (15 ft) between 16 ga and 12 ga speaker cord. there's a roll-off in larger frequencies with the thinner wires. it truly is measurable. yet domicile theater sound is diverse, the kit is many times lots a lot less delicate and the lengthy runs to the rear audio gadget do no longer carry serious sounds so that you may note any subject matters. (attempt un-plugging all the front audio gadget and subwoofer and pay interest to easily the rears - you're suprised at how little sound comes out.) An audiophile speaker web site once counseled the following handbook in accordance to run length: a million-10 ft: 16 ga 11-20 ft: 14 ga 20+ ft: 12 ga (convinced -you want thicker cord for longer runs - bummer) commonly, you purchase a spool of respectable oxygen-loose 14 or 12 ga speaker cord and use it everywhere. aspects teach has Dayton and Carol style for style of $0.50/ft. p.c.. IN CABLES i believe you've 20 or 24 ga cord blanketed contained in the container. "Gauge" is a wierd measurment. imagine of it this way: They take a million gauge cord and squish it to create 2 ga cord. Squish again to create 3,4,5... gauge. 20 gauge cord has been squished better than 12 ga so is way thinner. different cord suggestion: you do not make all wires the same length (audio delusion). degree the dimensions to the audio gadget, upload a million-2 ft and reduce. each 18 months you want to diminish the ends off to disclose sparkling copper and re-connect. it truly is accepted maintance. With any cable: take the cost of the gadgets you're connecting, calculate 10% and in no way spend better than this for the wires or cables. This incorporates speaker wires, element cables, HDMI cables, and so on. it truly is hardship-free to over-purchase. desire this enables.

2016-11-23 13:16:23 · answer #3 · answered by duzan 4 · 0 0

Sure. It will work. Speaker wire is like water pipes. The bigger the wire [or pipe], the less resistance. More water will flow through a bigger pipe, and more current will travel through a bigger wire. Make good connections. Soldering would be good. Do not have any frayed wires if your just twist them together.

2006-08-06 16:24:17 · answer #4 · answered by Gary I 1 · 0 0

Yes you can , but I would not recommend it.
Splicing wire is not a good thing, could have serious sound degradation for one, could cause a short if not properly wired and insulated
Recommend you re-wire your speakers for a good solid connection.

2006-08-07 11:33:48 · answer #5 · answered by coco2591 4 · 0 0

technically yes but for quality reasons it will suck. 24ga. is to small for rears due to the length with regards to impedance yada yada yada, splicing will make it alot worse, go spend a little money and make a single connection for each rear, 16ga will do fine, 12 or 10 ga if you want to be professional

2006-08-06 10:55:04 · answer #6 · answered by mohvictor 4 · 0 0

Yes you can.

It will have no effect whatsoever on whatever impedance your other correspondent had in mind, source or load, or on the sound quality as another correspondent suggests.

2006-08-06 12:06:04 · answer #7 · answered by dmb06851 7 · 0 0

yea, but it will probrably screw your impedance up, just redo the whole setup with 14 gauge wire.

2006-08-06 10:50:48 · answer #8 · answered by CMSgt342 3 · 0 0

well you can... but be prepared for some serious loss in sound quality... oh and also it depends on how you extend it... soddering is the best way! good luck

2006-08-06 10:49:49 · answer #9 · answered by bigslama912 3 · 0 0

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