I have a vocabulary question.


I'm really new at this and I'm confused by the terminology here. When someone's talking about interconnects, a pair means a single interconnect. Do people mean the same thing with speaker cables? That is, would I need two pairs of speaker wire to connect a pair of speakers?
tutordennis
Every signal path consists of forward and return paths.

A power cord has the plug with two or three prongs. Two of them are signal ones and one is ground. Signal ones are hot and newtral. Hot is forward and newtral is return.

A speaker wire consists of two wires either terminated or unterminated to be hooked up with speaker binding posts one of wire is forward and the other is return. Make sure keep connection in synch with power amplifier binding posts using color coding.
You need a pair of speaker wires if you have 2-ch system and more speaker wires if you have more than 2 channels.

An interconnect cable consists of one or two signal wires and ground. In case with balanced thre-wire interconnect you have one signal wire forward, one signal wire return and one ground wire. In case with unbalanced two-wire interconnect you have signal forward and ground return.
For every channel you will need one such interconnect cable.
I'm not entirely sure that Tutordennis' 2nd sentence is entirely wrong. Pairs in cables and IC's may be able to be like shoes sometimes, like scissors at others. From a prescriptivist point of view, there would be no ambiguity, but I think I have heard of some speaking of a pair of interconnects when only one wire was in hand? Too bad the OED online is subscription only.