Elementary Question on Shortening Speaker Wire


This is probably a very rudimentary question so apologies in advance. I have an old receiver that has spring clips for connecting the speaker wire. I have an extremely long piece of wire that I’m wanting to shorten. I cut it to size and stripped the sheathing on the end.  I was thinking I could just connect the raw end of the wire into the receiver, but I don’t get any sound. Is this doable or am I supposed to solder the end first?  I did notice that the other end (the end that wasn't cut) has a silver coating, which I assume is solder.  

 

Thanks in advance and sorry if this is a dumb question.

michaeloa

Just twist the new exposed wire end one way until it is small enough to fit into speaker terminal on the receiver. If it is too fat, trim some of the fine strands off until it fits into the terminal.

Just twist the new exposed wire end one way until it is small enough to fit into speaker terminal on the receiver. If it is too fat, trim some of the fine strands off until it fits into the terminal

But he has done that and he says theres no sound Dill. What do we do now?

You to actually read what he did and what I suggested he do. It seems the wire is not making contact with the metal part of the terminal, that is why I suggested to reduce the size. I see you just asked a question, your standard MOO. Good thing we always refer to rule #1, never listen to Kenjit.

What you did should work. I will usually solder the ends to prevent misc strands reach over and shorting the amp. 
 

So, what to do?

 

Verify both clips on the receiver have clipped down on their perspective wire and no  strands are touching the back panel or opposite terminal. 
 

Do you have any other wire you can use to verify the receiver to speaker connection works.

 

If another wire will not work, then you probably accidentally shorted out the amp in the receiver. Look for a fuse on the back of the receiver… usually brown cylindrical protuberance. Turn counterclockwise while pushing in to release. Is the filament broken? If so, go find a new fuse.