Make Speaker Cable or Surround-Sound Installation a Breeze: Cardas DIY Speaker Kit Includes U.S.A.-Made 101 Bulk Wire and Eight Speaker Snaps
Save money and get U.S.A.-made Cardas 101 bulk speaker wire plus two packs of Speaker Snaps (eight snaps total) to make terminations/connections a breeze, and go to town with surround-sound or budget stereo setups with this custom DIY speaker kit that lets you cut the wire to the lengths you need.
Want to enjoy natural tonality? Deep, rich bass response? How about detailed high frequencies? Experience a considerable leap in performance over stock wire with a simple speaker cable upgrade by way of Cardas 101 speaker cable. Featuring two 14 AWG bare-copper conductors built around a small air-tube, Cardas 101 adheres to Golden Ratio proportions and comes insulated in a poly jacket. Such isolation contributes to the natural, smooth, non-fatiguing sound for which Cardas 101 is renowned.
Since it uses OFHC bare copper and has a TPR outer jacket, Cardas 101 is easy to bend and flex. It can be used with crimped connectors, or just strip-and-twist to use it with five-way binding posts. No matter your approach, this is an instant way to get more engaging fidelity and upgrade from stock speaker wire! Plus, it can be ordered in any length you desire.
Speaker Snaps eliminate the hassle of connecting the speaker wire to your components, especially the maze of connectors on an AV receiver. To install, just strip the wire by half an inch and insert it into the back of the Speaker Snap. Then, simply snap the switch down to lock the wire firmly in place. Plugging the wire into your speakers, receivers, wall plates, and more has never been faster or easier. Speaker Snap doesn't require any tools, and the high-connectivity gold-plated connection means you'll enjoy quality sound.
Prepare Cardas 101 in Four Easy Steps:
1. Cut back a couple inches of the grey outer jacket, and you'll find two 14 AWG conductors surrounded by white cotton dielectric.
2. Cut away the dielectric, and strip about an inch of the red and black jackets from the conductor.
3. Untwist the copper wires, and you'll find a non-conductive core filament. Snip that away, and re-twist the conductor.
4. Now, you can use it as a bare-wire cable and insert the twisted copper into your binding posts. Or solder spades or bananas onto the ends.