Speaker cables are made of two electrical conductors usually made from copper. They are encased in a material like plastic or PVC usually to prevent damage.
It depends on what kind of hub you mean. Some useful cables could be power cables, CAT 5e cables, fiber optic cables, etc.
Yes, you can certainly use both cables in the same network.Yes, you can certainly use both cables in the same network.Yes, you can certainly use both cables in the same network.Yes, you can certainly use both cables in the same network.
fiber optic cables, coaxial cables, and twisted pair cables.
Trailing Cables are cables that are not secured in to a safe place. these cables often hazardous to to Animals and persons. eg. a pet dog bites an electrical cable and got shock to death or someone falling over cables crossing a room on the floor
you have to buy one of verizons connector cables specifically made for this purpose. Mine was 6 bucks
Yes
There are speaker cables, unbalanced analog cables, balanced analog cables, coaxial digital audio cables and optical audio cables.
Speaker cables may not necessarily need shielding if legnths are kept short. Istrument cables are shielded and kept to short stadardized lengths to prevent the introduction of noise which would affect the accuracy of the test reading.
There really aren't many large brands involved with making speaker cables and there isn't really much to argue with.It's not something you need to overthink.
Speaker cables can be bought at a variety of stores and even online. Best Buy, HHGregg, Target, Walmart and Kmart will carry speaker cables. They vary in price, depending on the length. They can cost from $5 up to $150 for commercial types.
I have my set of speaker cables and interconnects for over 8 years now. I feel that I need to change them. I recently bought a pair of AFA speaker cables and the sound improved by a bunch. So I am thinking about changing my interconnects as well. What do you guys think?
Speaker cables have only one golden rule, buy the thickest cables you can afford. Speaker cables depend of the individual wires within the cables to transfer information. The thicker the cable the more information transferred which results in a superior sound from your speaker. Be sure to look at your speakers and the sound source to determine the type of connection you need at each end of the cable. There are direct wire connections and plug-ins. Another very important factor to consider is whether the calbes will be installed behind your walls. If that is the case you must buy cables approved for that use since there is a fire hazard. You should measure and determine the length of cables you need so you are not paying for more than you need.
Yes, they do.
The red and black clips on the back of a speaker case are called RCA cables, or channel outputs.
Transmission cables are made of conductors and insulating material covering that conductor.
My PC speaker cables have a copper wire, as well as a insulated (white) copper wire. The headphones (Sony) appear to have 3 wires in them - green, red, and orange. The links you posted are more for car/home theater speaker wire.
Oxygen Free speaker cables usually refer to the fact that the copper used in their make up has not been exposed to the elements. It is refered to as OFC copper cable in some descriptions. Hope this helps. John Robinson Black Rhodium WWW.BLACKRHODIUM.CO.UK