Has biwire speaker cabling become "old" ?


I notice some makers are not stocking biwire termination. Has biwire gone out of favor ? Was it sonically meaningless ?
Have speaker makers dropped it ? Do us owners of biwire built speakers need to resort to jumpers or aftermarket biwire cables now ?
garn509

Showing 5 responses by dave_b

Are we done kissing RV's tush?  Ok, let's all use our own brains and try different methods.  I've played the field and have found that Biwiring makes a huge difference if you use a cable that actually is designed for high end performance and not just for connecting electrical appliances together (read wire only).  Hopefully your speakers have the terminals feeding seperate crossovers for the low and high frequencies...otherwise forget it!  MIT has just such cables....enjoy.
Sorry, I was out of line....I apologize.  Sometimes I think common sense and experimentation can yield verifiable results without relying to heavily on any one mans gospel.  RV is a good egg however, just need to balance sage advice with actual trial and error sometimes to determine if what does it for the adviser delivers for the advisee!
My Krells have crossover boards for each section and my MIT M1.5 Biwires have dedicated networks for high and low pass signals...BIG DIFFERENCE!!
MIT delivers otherworldly musical vistas for me...all else is just wire.  There are patents involved!
ctsooner, you are far to reasonable a person....how are we going to have an argument if you keep up this "level headed" response garbage:)