My experience with bi-wiring


Not wanting to debate the issue, which has been done ad nauseum, I just wanted to share my experience in case it's of help to anyone else in a similar position. Originally I single wired my speakers with jumpers made from my speaker cable, but I had been curious about bi-wiring and read all I could both pro and con. The main thing I gathered was that it is a contentious subject that there is no consensus on. I was reluctant to spend the money on something that may not pan out, but as the maker of my speaker recommended bi-wiring, I finally decided to give it a try.  I was impressed that there was a worthy improvement in detail/clarity across the frequency spectrum.  Admittedly any change is speaker dependent and YMMV, but if your speaker brand advocates it, I suggest it's worth a try.  
xs1137
b8ujps - I think you might have spelled that word wrong. Here is a guy that has a cheap system that calls out great speaker designers. Who can do this and actually think people will listen to him? IMO, I would listen to the great speaker designers (we all know who some of them are) than to somebody that goes the cheapest way out they can

The weakness for bi-wire is not the wire, it's the passive crossovers. Get rid of those components and go with only wire between the voice coils and amplifier outputs. Jason +1 for elimination of clipping. I tri-amp, also total elimination of intermodulation distortion.
@fiesta75.  
Question, if there are no components between the drivers and the amp(s), how are you dealing with the crossover points and protecting the drivers?
I am not a bi-wire person, but do admit that it is possible that two different wires might have different characteristics for bass vs everything else.  Bi-wiring with identicle wires does no more than maybe make up for wires being to small to begin with, or more likely, breaking the corrosion at the terminals, ala twisting you rremote batteries.