Color | Black,Blue |
Brand | InstallGear |
Material | Copper Clad Aluminum (CCA) |
Number of Cable Strands | true |
Gauge | 14.0 |
InstallGear 14 Gauge Speaker Wire Cable (500ft), 14 AWG Speaker Wire Cable, True Spec Soft Touch Cables – Use for Car Speakers Stereos, Home Theater Speakers, Surround Sound, Radio Wiring
£44.95
About this item
- Durable Design: This speaker cable blue 30 ft provides 30 feet of premium-grade 14 gauge wire, perfect for transmitting audio for car stereos, home theater systems, and outdoor setups
- Copper-Clad Aluminum Conductors: The car audio speaker wire 14 gauge features copper-clad aluminum for an economical yet effective audio transmission solution for high-quality sound
- Flexible PVC Jacket: This speaker wire 14 gauge is encased in a rugged, flexible PVC jacket that ensures durability while allowing for easy routing through tight spaces and around corners
- Easy Polarity Identification: The two-color blue and black jacket design helps identify polarity easily, making it simple to install house speaker wire without any audio disruptions or damage
- Versatile Application: Use this 14ga speaker wire for a range of audio setups, including car audio, home theater systems, and outdoor speaker installations for consistent, clear sound
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£5.62
7 reviews for InstallGear 14 Gauge Speaker Wire Cable (500ft), 14 AWG Speaker Wire Cable, True Spec Soft Touch Cables – Use for Car Speakers Stereos, Home Theater Speakers, Surround Sound, Radio Wiring
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– Mr. Jonatan Wolff DDS
I used this for running my stereo to my speakers in my living room. I had thinner less flexible wire before, and my dog snapped it off trying to retrieve a ball under the TV stand. This wire was heavier gauge (better sound) and so nice and flexible to run around the wall edges. That rubberized coating was really appreciated when I needed to strip it back to get to the wire to connect everything up. I will never use that thin speaker wire again.
– Fabiola Cremin Sr.
Speaker wire gauge I needed for subwoofer box. More than enough length than I need. Handles the power I’m putting to it. Spool has a good weight to it also you know, for throwing.
– Dr. Llewellyn Heller IV
This speaker cable works just fine. I like the different colors making polarity easy. Works great with banana plugs or bare. Flexible. The one con is every time I cut them, I get several loose single strands come out that I have the find and throw away.
– Prof. Lorenz Kub I
Sorry it took so long but great price fast shipping
– Prof. Spencer Homenick Sr.
Not bad for the price point.. heavy insulation. Little difficult routing in a harness but works well
– Clovis Harris MD
This wire is great good quality and my system sounds really good I wired all my speakers off the deck with this wire and used it for the subs
– Ms. Maud Ernser
Did not yet use. Keeping it for future use. 14AWG wire is excellent for moderate to longer runs of wire for high quality sound reproduction especially with ‘vintage’ stereo components from the 1970’s like Pioneer, Kenwood , Marantz receivers and integrated amplifiers connecting to good quality two way and three way speaker systems. I am currently using 16 AWG wire (one diameter smaller) for my Pioneer SA- 9500-2 integrated amplifier rated @ 80 watts per channel RMS continuous power output from 20hz-20,000 hz into 8 ohms with 0.05 % THD ( Total Harmonic Distortion) using 4 Technics 3 way speaker systems with bass ported 12″ woofers. (hz=hertz same as cps= cycles per second) : how many vibrations a particular tone or frequency makes in one second from positive to negative creating the sound you hear and enjoy. My stereo system is vintage 1977 and works perfectly. It is well made. Try finding that today! Heavier wire means less resistance resulting in less power being wasted in friction producing heat allowing for more efficient power transfer used for reproducing the music rather than being wasted away in extra resistance producing friction that generates heat. 14AWG & 16 AWG wire is good for most applications where distance is moderate between speakers and amplifiers or receivers. Receivers are amplifiers containing an AM-FM tuner on the same chassis. Integrated amplifiers contain a Preamplifier for turntables that use magnetic phonograph cartridges in the tonearm and a separate power amplifier on the same chassis then relying on a separate AM-FM tuner connected to it for radio broadcasts. Receivers combine all three units together on one chassis. Technically separating them out into separate units is theoretically better as each unit can concentrate on what it was designed to do. I prefer separate integrated amplifier and AM-FM tuner combos over one unit receivers. But practically speaking there is no degradation or detectable difference in sound quality. Both arraangements work well.