

Based on the technology available speaker wire and audio cables are still needed to get the best sound quality possible. To create a truly thrilling and immersive home audio experience, you need speakers that can deliver massive sonic impact while accurately recreating instruments, human voices, and sounds effects with convincing realism. SVS SoundPath RCA Audio Interconnect Cable


SoundPath Tri-Band Wireless Audio Adapter Of couse, if fidelity is truly important to you, then I'd advise against the whole two center speaker concept anyway. I'm not saying that it can't be done, but if fidelity is important to you, I'd advise against it. The result is that these two speakers behave as a single poorly damped speaker, not a desirable sonic trait, and can also create problems in the form of back emf. Since neither speaker is reacting to the same electrical signal, they do not work together in unison, but rather work against each other. The modified signal is then sent on to the second speaker where is is faithfully reproduced.

The problem arises as the electrical signal is passed through the first speaker and is changed by this electrical load. A series wiring scheme ties the speakers together in one circuit so that the speakers are forced to behave as one electrical load. The speakers are not really tied to together electrically, and each speaker is free to act independent of the other one, but so long as they create very similar loads to the amp, they will work in unison fairly well as if they were one speaker. When you wire speakers together in parallel you actually create two seperate circuits. If the only consideration were the impedance load on the amp, series wiring would be okay, but that isn't the only consideration. I don't advocate wiring speakers in series - at least not for "hi fidelity" home audio systems.
