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Question about speaker wire

post #1 of 8
Thread Starter 
I should already know this, but I'm having a brain cramp right now. On most speaker wire one of the strands usually has a white line going through it. Does this white line mean negative or positive? I'm pretty sure it's negative, but I just wanted to verify it is.

Thanks
post #2 of 8
Negative, but it doesn't matter, you just need to be consistent.
post #3 of 8
Thread Starter 
Quote:
Originally Posted by ooheadsoo
Negative, but it doesn't matter, you just need to be consistent.
I understand the consistency part but sometimes there are situations where one of the ends is terminated so that you can't tell. So in those cases I assume the strand with the white line is negative right?
post #4 of 8
IIRC, typically, the one with the line (any color) is negative. This, for whatever reason, doesn't seem to hold true for case switch and light leads, but other than those cases...
post #5 of 8
I've been making the lined or marked wire my + My logic is that on speakers, the + terminal is normally marked with a red dot or something.
post #6 of 8
Quote:
Originally Posted by audiomortis
I've been making the lined or marked wire my + My logic is that on speakers, the + terminal is normally marked with a red dot or something.
Me too - as long as it's the same @ speaker and amp though it doesn't matter afaik (all the cables i have bought pre terminated were + tracer - no tracer)
post #7 of 8
I always treat the wire that has markings or has the most vibrant color as + (green and grey, green is +; striped and non-striped, striped is +; red and black, red is +). It doesn't matter at all what you do as long as you do the same thing at the speaker end as you do at the amp end.
post #8 of 8
Quote:
Originally Posted by sr20dem0n
I always treat the wire that has markings or has the most vibrant color as + (green and grey, green is +; striped and non-striped, striped is +; red and black, red is +). It doesn't matter at all what you do as long as you do the same thing at the speaker end as you do at the amp end.
Correct.
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