Speaker Wires: Can I use different Wire Gauges in the same Conductor?


I am currently experimenting with different wire materials and different wire gauges for DIY speaker cables. So far, I am getting superb mid range from two 24AWG 5N silver wires, one hot, the other for return (+). The wires are imbedded in two 22AWG PTFE tubings, meaning the actual dielectric is air. The sound is hugely dynamic and spacious! I need to open the volume control on my preamp no more than 10 O'Clock to fill the room with very loud sound. This flies in the face of everything I have heard about speaker cables in terms of wire size, 16AWG or even 12AWG being usually recommended. For my subs I use 7 parallel silver-plated copper 22AWG  each for - and +. The sound blows the roof off my place and is very physical in terms of making the skin vibrate. Now I became curious, and I do not have an answer yet: what would happen if I use different wire gauges for the hot and the return in the same cable, let's say 24AWG for the -, and 26AWG for the +? I would assume that the impedance of the entire conductor would be determined by the smallest wire (26AWG); however, since most of the energy of the hot signal is being converted into mechanical by the speaker cone, I wonder, if one could get away with having a smaller wire for the return. In the case of silver as a conductor material, this translates directly into $$$, hence my question. I could, of course, just do the experiment and listen, but I would like to understand the theory behind it, and what effect it would have on signal symmetry or "smearing".

 
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calculator for you:

https://www.wirebarn.com/Combined-Wire-Gauge-Calculator_ep_42.html

7 x 24 awg is still only 16 awg. I would get to 12 at least for a non-powered sub, preferably 10. those frequencies are power hogs.

Silver is only 7% better conductor than copper so that won't significantly reduce the wire gauge requirements.

Jerry

Using various different gauge wire strands has been the basis for Cardas cables its' entire history.

Thanks for all your comments. I think, I have to clarify my original question: I was NOT asking whether different AWG gauge wires can be used in one combination-speaker cable. Of course they can, and I am quite familiar with Cardas and Nordost cable architecture. My question was: can I use one size for the - line and another, smaller size for the + , in the same cable, i.e. for a single speaker cone? The difference in impedance over a relatively short run (< 10 feet) should be negligible, NO? All cones in my speaker system are actively powered, each one with its own amp; the signals for the latter coming from an active crossover. So, my question is in regard of silver wire for all the 5 channels. I currently use a single (!!) home-made 23 AWG solid-core silver cable for my 200 W- powered mid-range cone, for example, and it sounds great. I would like to experiment with a 22 AWG for the - and 26 AWG for the +: Will I get the benefit of the thicker wire, or the disadvantage of the thinner one, or won't I be able to hear a difference? What is the physics here, which I want to understand. Needless to say: if I can get away with a higher AWG number for the return wires on all my 5 cones, this translates into beaucoup bucks for silver!