This is an old thread but I was playing with this on my used 7BST’s I just picked up. I bi-wired to my speakers. My assumption is I now have a fight current connection to the LF binding posts and a high current connection to the HF binding posts. Is this assumption correct?
that being said, I don’t see any speaker manufacturers listing the impedance of the LF and HF connections individually. They only list the speaker as a whole or “nominal 4 ohms”
I am guessing I can connect one of those Parts Express speaker testers to it to see what the impedance curve looks like. I am assuming they will be 8 ohm loads and with the bridging clips in they would parallel down to 4 ohm loads.
I have seen different specs on the 7B’s output. So figuring out what the potential wattage is when in Parallel mode is getting tricky. The factories final check out slip indicated the output at something like 615 watts. The literature says 800 watts.
Either way I felt the bottom end on my speakers seemed to play a little better with the system bi-wired in parallel mode.
that being said, I don’t see any speaker manufacturers listing the impedance of the LF and HF connections individually. They only list the speaker as a whole or “nominal 4 ohms”
I am guessing I can connect one of those Parts Express speaker testers to it to see what the impedance curve looks like. I am assuming they will be 8 ohm loads and with the bridging clips in they would parallel down to 4 ohm loads.
I have seen different specs on the 7B’s output. So figuring out what the potential wattage is when in Parallel mode is getting tricky. The factories final check out slip indicated the output at something like 615 watts. The literature says 800 watts.
Either way I felt the bottom end on my speakers seemed to play a little better with the system bi-wired in parallel mode.