Canare 4S11 about $1.60 per foot, used in recording studios.
The Canare quad is very good value for the price. That said, if you are looking for more premium options, DH Labs sells some great cables in bulk by the foot. I used 24’ runs of the T-14 for my home theater, which sounded great until I took the theater apart. I did use the Canare many, many years ago and it’s a great value cable in comparison. I’m full disclosure I am a DH Labs dealer.
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You might look at Furez In-Wall Rated Speaker Cable. They make a 14awg x 4 wire cable (2 x 14awg = 11awg) or a 14awg x 2 wire cable. The wire is 99.997% OFHC C10100 Copper Construction (High Conductivity Oxygen Free Copper), in a 7 Bundle Advanced Rope Lay Design. The other unusual value with this cable is the foamed polyethylene insulation (FPE), which I have never seen at these prices. I believe these come in either 25-foot lengths or a 500-foot spool. However, at AV Outlet, it appears that multiples of the 25-foot length ship as one continuous cable, which is what you need. Price-wise it would be hard to beat a star-quad, 11 awg OFHC copper cable at $0.75 or less per foot. |
If one is bi wiring then the Mogami 3104 is a great choice. If one likes cotton insulation, then the Jupiter cable is not bad. @jumia So for an AVR…
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@emergingsoul The DH Labs bulk cables come in four different options from $5-$27/ft and their designs vary in conductor gauge and materials, dielectric designs, etc. The T-14 I was mentioning is $13/ft. The Q-10 is even better which basically takes four conductors to make two 10awg silver plated high purity copper, but at $27/ft. Info on them is available from their website link in my post above. |
@jumia Your last statement is subjective, and the pricing is value driven for the level of performance. Their products satisfy some of the best quality components and speakers, but as I said, Canare is okay for more basic applications. |
Objectively; isn’t a rear set of HT speakers a basic application? The front speakers, and a 2 channel especially, speaker cables and the rest of the chain, make a more noticeable difference - than sound during a movie.
Hence; I think cheaping out on the rear speaker cables makes a lot of sense. Putting the rear cables into a plastic conduit, so that different ones can be pulled through the wall later without destroying anything also makes sense. And putting in larger sweeps make pulling a cable through a lot easier than a tight 90. |