Factors affecting speaker wire performance
As already mentioned, all cables will lose some of the power sent through them – you may not feel your speaker cables getting warm, but it happens. The result is that your 100 W amplifier may, with the wrong cable, only be delivering 80-90% of its power to your speakers. You’ve paid good money for those watts, so you want as many of them as possible to arrive at the speakers.
The most common cause of that loss is the “too thin, too long” concept mentioned earlier: yes, it may be desirable to run thin cable to speakers used in a secondary zone of your home, where neither maximum volume nor ultimate sound quality is vital, but for your main system the best advice is to run cables of the right length to reach the speakers, and of a sensible gauge. For example, DALI recommends at least 2.5 mm2 for runs of up to 5 m in your listening room, but if you need longer runs from amplifier to speakers, it’s worth considering thicker 4 mm2 cables to minimise signal losses.
In other words, not super-thick cables snaking across the floor, but merely well-constructed cables of a sensible gauge for what you need. It’s also worth noting that you should keep your cable lengths identical in a stereo setup, even if one speaker is closer to the amplifier than the other, and loop any excess cable loosely rather than coiling it tightly: all of this will mean the effect of the cables is the same on each channel.
What material should cable conductors be made from?
Welcome to the world of exotica featuring materials from different purities of copper (expressed by how little oxygen there is in the material) to silver-plated copper, and from pure silver to carbon, gold or even more “advanced” materials. It’s true that different materials used in various combinations can, in many situations, give different sonic results. However, before investing in speaker cables – or any Hi-Fi component – we recommend that you visit your local Hi-Fi specialist so you can listen to a selection of products for yourself. Trust your ears, not the marketing.