Scared of Soldering? This is how you do it!

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  • Опубліковано 2 лют 2025

КОМЕНТАРІ • 221

  • @tylerwillems9358
    @tylerwillems9358 3 роки тому +3

    This is very helpful. The way you speak makes me feel very comfortable lol

  • @mcmSEA
    @mcmSEA 2 роки тому +3

    Thank you for creating this video! I've been a musician for decades and I haven't bothered soldering things myself for ages, so I've never learned how to properly do it. Your video was perfect.

  • @johnwatts6480
    @johnwatts6480 14 днів тому

    Hey Danny. Really like the vintage video. Makes me feel better about soldering. Now that Sears/Craftsman is out of business this soldering iron is getting hard to find. Found a few on EBay and paid $121 including shipping. It works great and looks like it will last forever. Just FYI in case any viewers are in the market.

  • @scotm3599
    @scotm3599 4 роки тому +5

    Nice tutorial. Thank you so much. I was horrible at soldering. After watching this video, I am confident I can do a much better job by tinning and preloading the tip. Nice clean practical application.

  • @Klaster_1
    @Klaster_1 29 днів тому

    Thank you for the guide, this was exactly what I was looking for. Never soldered a speaker and terminals before.

  • @carlosmauricioespitia6016
    @carlosmauricioespitia6016 4 роки тому +2

    Thanks Danny. Small details like this are so valuable!

  • @budgober
    @budgober 3 роки тому

    Boy..do you have some steady hands!! Props to you sirr. Great work. Many thanks.

  • @obudaifourty9
    @obudaifourty9 3 роки тому +12

    Thanks Richie. It is a very important element of the DIY community's arsenal and so many are doing it wrong.

  • @andrewlarue4774
    @andrewlarue4774 6 місяців тому

    Best soldering tutorial I've seen. Thanks!

  • @daveshear
    @daveshear 4 роки тому +1

    Thanks Danny! I haven't soldered in 20 years. Just waiting on the NX-Studios that I'll need this for. Thanks again!

    • @nicholasreeves5025
      @nicholasreeves5025 4 роки тому

      David S have the NX arrived and how do they sound?

    • @daveshear
      @daveshear 4 роки тому

      @@nicholasreeves5025 Hey Nick, they have arrived but I have not built the cabinets yet. Working on those now. It will probably be 3 weeks before they are entirely finished. I'm going to have them professionally painted by a auto painter to match the Spatial Sapphire m3's I purchased as well. Hopefully have an update and a month or so.

  • @Ozravens
    @Ozravens 2 роки тому

    Concise and simply explained - Woulve been the best teacher I had! Great video

  • @roybusler6653
    @roybusler6653 2 роки тому

    Thank you for the video, I'm installing new speakers in an old truck and will now solder every connection instead of using the slide connectors you mentioned. I feel confident I can do it now. :)

  • @MrChaggy123
    @MrChaggy123 4 роки тому +1

    I love your videos!!! Keep on going!!! Kjell from Norway!!

  • @Newrecordday
    @Newrecordday 4 роки тому +4

    Good job Danny! I actually learned something here and have been doing it wrong... appreciated this episode!

  • @HD-su9sq
    @HD-su9sq 4 роки тому +2

    Thank you Danny for the video! I've been thinking of the kit route for a while to save money but the soldering seemed daunting. You make it look really easy!
    I really like that you are boosting musicians as well, because they really struggle.

  • @cameronkrause4712
    @cameronkrause4712 3 роки тому

    OMG- you just showed me why I was having such a hard time, BIG THANK YOU !!!!

  • @hoth2112
    @hoth2112 4 роки тому +2

    Great tips, Danny! Thanks for the info, and another fine video!

  • @jeremyaguilar3805
    @jeremyaguilar3805 Рік тому +1

    As a novice in soldering electronics, you'd think putting soder on the wire & speaker connector, the soder would impede a good connection. These videos are very helpful

  • @andy52709
    @andy52709 2 роки тому

    THANK YOU, great simple, straightforward explanation. Now it's time to upgrade my speakers thanks to you

  • @fxstd000
    @fxstd000 4 роки тому

    Awesome instructional video! Thanks for sharing. How can anyone "dislike" this video? Shame on them!

  • @michealfoxx7424
    @michealfoxx7424 Рік тому +1

    Your video was very helpful thank you

  • @johnharrigan8770
    @johnharrigan8770 4 роки тому

    A brilliant simple easily assimilated demo covering all the salient points. I started soldering when you had to heat a copper obelisk shaped head on the end of a rod with a wooden handle for big joints ie a car radiator a tomahawk weighing several ounces,

  • @kartickgrover
    @kartickgrover 4 роки тому +1

    Thanks Danny, valuable inputs.

  • @tedpuckett2779
    @tedpuckett2779 Рік тому

    Very helpful. Good presentation style.

  • @shawnkarvonen
    @shawnkarvonen 4 роки тому +7

    The tinning and keeping solder on the gun are the keys

  • @davestanekmusician572
    @davestanekmusician572 3 місяці тому

    Great video. Thank you!

  • @pkearns55
    @pkearns55 4 місяці тому

    Great video and advice .Irish fan

  • @geoffreydebrito7934
    @geoffreydebrito7934 3 роки тому

    Thank you Danny!

  • @seanrosedotcom
    @seanrosedotcom 3 роки тому

    Daria is super bad ass. Her band doesn't suck either. We all can thank UA-cam for them.

  • @BIGSMONITORS
    @BIGSMONITORS 2 роки тому +4

    for high end soldering, you should not solder by holding the wire in place with your hand because any vibration or shaking of the hand during the liquid to solid phase of the solder will weaken the connection - you need to mechanically secure the wire with a solid vibration free clamp system during this phase. Also, for the most reliable solder connection, a specialized liquid flux needs to be applied for a perfect bond - the flux that is in the solder core is inadequate,

    • @Sn00chieb00chies
      @Sn00chieb00chies Місяць тому +2

      What do you recommend

    • @sacballa_kills_em_wit_facts
      @sacballa_kills_em_wit_facts Місяць тому

      @@Sn00chieb00chiesSchneider Accessory Kit from Harbor Freight($19.99) Get some Chicago Electric Lead-Free Rosin Core Solder($4.99).

  • @jacko717
    @jacko717 2 роки тому

    Very well explained thank you Sir. May I ask should I use flux when soldering in a replacement speaker?

  • @polimind
    @polimind 3 роки тому

    Exactly what I was looking for. Thanks Sir. :)

  • @jaumm8839
    @jaumm8839 2 роки тому

    pure gold is good for it?

  • @bg8113
    @bg8113 4 місяці тому

    Great video

  • @merlecrandall1709
    @merlecrandall1709 4 роки тому +1

    Thank you for showing us. I was close and doing whated seemed right. That's what happens when called to that odd sodering which is in a blue moon. The only other sodering was copper pipes in the house, doing the handyman thing. Now I'm all staighten out.......

  • @pandstar
    @pandstar 4 роки тому

    Nice tutorial.
    My friend still owns a Gary Dodd battery powered preamp. Still sounds great, even by today's standards.

  • @thomasguilmoto
    @thomasguilmoto Рік тому

    what wire for soldering do you recommend ?

  • @nickl8830
    @nickl8830 Рік тому +1

    Thanks for this video I need this info

  • @optimalforager
    @optimalforager 3 роки тому

    Molly Tuttle is an excellent artist in the folk, bluegrass, americana sort of intercept...

  • @caseyodonnell6621
    @caseyodonnell6621 4 роки тому +5

    Hi Danny, thanks for the tutorial. It's been a while since I did any soldering . Is 60/40 fine? Does the upgrade to silver solder make a difference? Generally what type of solder do you prefer/recommend? Thanks!

    • @harryberry474
      @harryberry474 3 роки тому +2

      I'd like to know the same thing, waiting patiently for Danny to talk a little about solder types and no mention at all, kind of surprised he didn't mention anything especially because it's the thing that makes the actual connection.

    • @ZOMGWTFALLNAMESTAKEN
      @ZOMGWTFALLNAMESTAKEN 2 роки тому

      Silver solder is for metal connections and has an acid core that will eat insulation. You want 60 40 tin lead, silver solder also melts way hotter, you don't want that degree of heat near engineered textiles.

    • @caseyodonnell6621
      @caseyodonnell6621 2 роки тому

      @@ZOMGWTFALLNAMESTAKEN Thanks!

  • @allanw.4500
    @allanw.4500 4 роки тому +1

    Why do you twist the wires together on your point-to-point crossover component connections but you don't twist the wires onto the speaker terminals?

    • @dannyrichie9743
      @dannyrichie9743 4 роки тому

      Twisting wires together is the connection and is the best connection. It adds surface contact area. The solder just holds it there. That is not possible on the terminals. For maximum contact area on the terminals it needs to be done as shown.

  • @rderfa
    @rderfa 3 роки тому

    Nice video!!! Thanks a lot, man. Cheers!!!

  • @Mikinct
    @Mikinct 3 роки тому

    Great video- it helped a lot.
    Question: how can I clean solder off of a speaker terminal.
    Trying for a clean slate to try & solder it again.
    My first attempt has soo much excess solder. that I’m unsure if wire is even making contact with copper connection etc.

  • @jamestyrer6067
    @jamestyrer6067 2 роки тому

    Thank you for this video

  • @CrispyRRider
    @CrispyRRider 2 місяці тому

    What do you call the paper material that the terminal is made of? Mine ripped, looking for a replacement

  • @sinisa317
    @sinisa317 2 роки тому

    Danny, is it possible to make one bookshelf like xls with this driver that you solder ;)

  • @FuriousTortoise
    @FuriousTortoise 2 роки тому

    I understand why you’re not doing it but I still plan on soldering the wire after twisting it onto the post. I’m mostly a PCB guy but contacts are contacts.
    First, apply flux to the wire (I drag my wire through paste flux then twist it onto the terminal). It should improve the strength of connection and ensure wire is not just floating in the solder.
    Like was said in the video, be careful not to overheat the connection and damage it. I’d lightly pre-tin the post, flux liberally, and use confidence while soldering the braided wire onto the post.
    You could/should clean the finished solder joint with the highest grade alcohol you have to remove any baked on flux/impurities.

  • @ike9585
    @ike9585 3 роки тому

    Hey as a response to asking what some artists to check out are... I would really recommend listening to some Tipper. He's got a pretty good following I guess, but I don't get the sense that a lot of audiophile folks are familiar with his music. Tipper is amazing though in my opinion, especially from a sound quality and sound design perspective. I've always wanted to listen to his music on a system of the quality that you have access to. I've seen him live a bunch on some really nice Funktion One setups, but I bet what you have would do it way more justice.

  • @zulumax1
    @zulumax1 4 роки тому

    For those of us with shakier hands I would recommend going through the hole at an angle to help support the wire from movement. Folks should be aware of movement of parts while solder is going from molten to solid can cause a disturbed or cold solder joint which can cause a high resistance poor connection. As a technician I do hate it when people wrap the wire round and round the terminal, it is not necessary when a J hook will do in an amplifier.

  • @matthewcooke4477
    @matthewcooke4477 4 роки тому +1

    When applying solder to tin the wire... to make sure the solder is flowing evenly threw I like to place my soldering iron under the wire. You will see the solder (once all the wire is up to even temperature) form around to where your able to see each strand of wire. After that I like to apply a little more solder after to make sure theres enough solder on my wire so that I can get a good connection 100%

    • @harryberry474
      @harryberry474 3 роки тому

      Matthew Cooke...that's fine for stranded wire but Danny uses single strand pure copper wire for most all his connections including this demonstration .

    • @ElCidPhysics90
      @ElCidPhysics90 Рік тому

      @@harryberry474 where do you find that kind of wire? All I can find is stranded wire.

    • @harryberry474
      @harryberry474 Рік тому +1

      @@ElCidPhysics90 ...Good question, I don't know I see a very large spool in the background he must buy it in bulk, personally I've always used OFC multi strand wire for speaker connections I was taught the more strands the better because the electrical signal travels on the outer circumference of the wire(s) that's the reasoning around the high count multi strand wire. But I'd say Danny knows a whole a lot more than I do so there's got to be a reason he uses solid wire over stranded.

  • @HoomanR17
    @HoomanR17 4 роки тому +1

    Thanks .. super helpful.

  • @alejandrocervantes4523
    @alejandrocervantes4523 3 роки тому

    Yes thank you

  • @ruivazlourenco3913
    @ruivazlourenco3913 2 роки тому

    Hello. What material you use to solder?

  • @stephenwilliams1854
    @stephenwilliams1854 3 роки тому

    Hi Danny.Great video.What was the full name of the soldering iron that you favour.I couldn't make out the first word.Thanks Steve.

  • @99thDimension
    @99thDimension 4 роки тому +1

    Cleaning the tip every time keeps impurities out of the solder joint that gunk can spread like a cancer and break down the solder over time...keep it clean Danny.

  • @Davidkxf
    @Davidkxf 3 роки тому

    No flux required?

  • @jolox.
    @jolox. 2 роки тому

    Thanks for the very well done video. I'm just starting and this is very helpful! I'm going to thumbs up and subscribe to support your channel!

  • @grandinfinite5921
    @grandinfinite5921 3 роки тому

    Thank you

  • @scottorsbon608
    @scottorsbon608 3 роки тому

    What temperature does the gun need to be to heat the wire up enough to melt the solder? I bought a Weller that advertises 900 degrees, but it will not melt the solder.

    • @dannyrichie9743
      @dannyrichie9743 3 роки тому

      Solder melts at much lower temperatures than that.

  • @StewartMarkley
    @StewartMarkley 4 роки тому

    Danny, thats a nice touch to ask for people to share links of videos for artists that should get additional recognition. I have become a major fan of a group from Russia called Leonid and Friends who do covers of the group Chicago that are just astounding and have seen them in my area here near Pittsburg last October. They are simply amazingly good at sounding every bit as good as Chicago ever did and do their recordings in a studio in Moscow in a single take playing all together. This is unheard of and each and every one of them are fabulous artists in their own right. Their website is leonidandf.com and they have many Chicago songs and a few other great tunes from other American artists as well. It's kinda ironic for me to be such a fan of Russian artists as I quite literally had my finger on the button to launch missiles from my submarine to destroy Russia back in the 1970's.

    • @porkchopspapi5757
      @porkchopspapi5757 4 роки тому

      Is that something you were OK'd to tell?

    • @StewartMarkley
      @StewartMarkley 4 роки тому

      @@porkchopspapi5757 what? That we targeted Russia in the cold war? That's not exactly a revelation don't ya think?

    • @porkchopspapi5757
      @porkchopspapi5757 4 роки тому

      @@StewartMarkley I'll spell it out for you.
      "I quite literally had my finger on the button to launch missiles from my submarine to destroy Russia back in the 70's"

    • @StewartMarkley
      @StewartMarkley 4 роки тому

      @@porkchopspapi5757 so what?

    • @porkchopspapi5757
      @porkchopspapi5757 4 роки тому

      @@StewartMarkley I guess that's the answer to my question.

  • @mikeeygauthier2959
    @mikeeygauthier2959 3 роки тому +2

    I think the only problem with soldering is that you’ve added another level of connection in the signal path. Crimping would be the best. As a sidenote the FAA does not allow soldering in the wiring of any airplane.

    • @An_Idiot_in_the_Wild
      @An_Idiot_in_the_Wild 3 роки тому

      Utter nonsense. If the FAA didn't allow solder in planes, there would be no planes in the USA... it is all through all of them. In FACT, FAA guidelines say wires should be tinned at the joint, to prevent oxidation on contact surfaces (with tinning being done with tin for lower temperature areas, silver for higher temp, and nickel for the highest temperature areas).

    • @ekimandersom4478
      @ekimandersom4478 Рік тому

      So all the circuit boards in planes are not soldered?
      What a bullshit

    • @lcsvlone2811
      @lcsvlone2811 Рік тому

      Good thing we’re soldering sound systems in cheap cars, not airplanes

    • @looking_33
      @looking_33 Рік тому

      what a load of sht

  • @brianaustin8136
    @brianaustin8136 9 місяців тому

    What kinda solder do you use?

  • @flashbizz6110
    @flashbizz6110 3 роки тому

    Thank you sir!

  • @johannjohann6523
    @johannjohann6523 Рік тому

    cool video, like how you are giving some artists face time that certainly deserve it. thanks for confirming what I knew about soldering. I respect your opinion, and wanted to see what you had to say. Only thing, is types of solder. I tend to use silver solder as it won't corrode for electrical circuits and speakers, but what type of solder do you recommend? maybe you have that on a different video?

  • @bujoun76
    @bujoun76 4 роки тому

    I don't think the crossover building link is there.

  • @angelotig
    @angelotig 4 роки тому

    What about silver solder?

    • @dannyrichie9743
      @dannyrichie9743 4 роки тому

      You bet. I have quite a bit in here that is 3% Silver.

  • @C_O_N_C_E_P_T
    @C_O_N_C_E_P_T 3 роки тому

    What type of solder wire do you recommend? 60/40?
    63?

  • @SuperMoeLarryCurly
    @SuperMoeLarryCurly 4 роки тому

    Thank you for this. What do you recommend between the crossover and terminal cup? If we already have those installed.. thanks!

    • @dannyrichie9743
      @dannyrichie9743 4 роки тому

      There should be nothing between them but the wire used to connect them.

  • @Ocshredder714
    @Ocshredder714 2 роки тому

    Great video, 90% of the videos say to put it through the hole and had it down for awhile.
    Glad you pointed it out.
    I was going to get some quick disconnects, but now I think I'll just soldering it.

    • @ekimandersom4478
      @ekimandersom4478 Рік тому

      Thats not what he said.
      You can use the hole, just don’t wrap the cable around

  • @marcdrouillard4055
    @marcdrouillard4055 4 роки тому

    Hi Danny. Excellent video as usual... Is the wire you used in the soldering demo coated with something before the tinning took place? The wire looked like it was tin plated not bare copper!

    • @dannyrichie9743
      @dannyrichie9743 4 роки тому

      It is just four 9's pure Copper with a polyethylene jacket.

  • @chrisbarnhart2032
    @chrisbarnhart2032 4 роки тому

    Thomas Weeks and Force of Nature!!!!! he has a cd out and played at the gas monkey venue... his cd is great... check out the song "into the night"..... i saw him in seattle with enuff znuff and oh man did he ROCK the place!!!! this is his first cd....

  • @yogiwp_
    @yogiwp_ 4 роки тому +1

    So yeah I guess I've been doing it wrong lol. Thanks for the video!

  • @dilbyjones
    @dilbyjones 4 роки тому +2

    Nice! Thanks for the vid, what about Flux ?

  • @shawnkarvonen
    @shawnkarvonen 4 роки тому

    I am subscribed to Daria love it

  • @maxrockbin
    @maxrockbin 3 роки тому +2

    I don't get why you want to put solder between the wire and the speaker connector. Solder is basically tin - which is what's in the crappy wire connectors. Why not splay the wire out for max contact to the speaker connector and use solder on top of that to hold it to the speaker connector? Maybe it wouldn't stick?

    • @dannyrichie9743
      @dannyrichie9743 3 роки тому +1

      That would over heat the connection and makes a poor solder joint.

  • @monkeymanstones1
    @monkeymanstones1 4 роки тому

    Musician recommendation: Gerod Shea (with or without Molten Soul). He's my close friend's younger brother.

  • @shawnkarvonen
    @shawnkarvonen 4 роки тому +1

    Kyrie by hscc Let me know what you think

  • @dell177
    @dell177 4 роки тому +1

    Years ago a small company I was working for had a contract manufacturer assembling products for us. They did a beautiful job stuffing and soldering printed circuit boards but when it came to soldering #14 wire to terminals.
    They were using ISO 9000 approved 20w irons that were great for fine work but just didn't have the balls for heavier duty work. We ended up using aa old fashioned 50w unger iron that had to be at least 800 degrees. The key was to tin everything first and then use a hot iron so everything up to temperature fast, apply the solder and take the iron away as soon as it all got up to the right temperature.
    The small iron just can't heat a larger joint up enough and results in poor cold solder joints.

  • @calvindiv7231
    @calvindiv7231 3 роки тому

    Perfect video that you!

  • @Helectronics
    @Helectronics 4 роки тому +1

    Informative video, thanks!

  • @joshuamccoy5916
    @joshuamccoy5916 2 роки тому

    Shoot if your solder gun Isn’t hot enough it’s very hard but you work with what you got. Moral of the story don’t buy one that has a battery 🔋

  • @justlookingaround9834
    @justlookingaround9834 3 роки тому

    Well, if you are being critical the iron is too large for the task but experience cancels that out. Too much solder was used on the pre tin of the wires. Also theoretically solder joints should never be the mechanical joint and the hole is there for a reason and the same contact area would be made with the wire fed through but it’s then difficult to replace but it shouldn’t need replacing. The most important thing is to never blow on a joint to cool it, as the material is a eutectic alloy and will crystallise.

    • @justlookingaround9834
      @justlookingaround9834 3 роки тому

      Oh and the iron should never be pre loaded with that much solder, that is bad practice.

    • @justlookingaround9834
      @justlookingaround9834 3 роки тому

      I can’t edit so I’m adding the most important thing and why it didn’t occur to me? Fume extraction.

    • @An_Idiot_in_the_Wild
      @An_Idiot_in_the_Wild 3 роки тому

      It's wiring between two fixed points that aren't moving, there is no strain or movement on that wire, there is no need to use the hole for mechanical strength on the joint. Far better to solder it as he did, so it can be quickly soldered on and off.

  • @scarabeo500gt
    @scarabeo500gt 3 роки тому

    You all need to check out "TOMASINA" she and the band are great! They once played TLT at Disneyland and around Southern California.

  • @ron6706
    @ron6706 4 роки тому +3

    Yup. I've been doing it wrong.

  • @pvanb291
    @pvanb291 4 роки тому +1

    Hey Danny, good video. Just curious as to when Americans decided to drop the letter "L" from solder? It's pronounced just like "soldier" but without the "i" , which you guys can say just fine. ;)

    • @StewartMarkley
      @StewartMarkley 4 роки тому

      Yeah, I find it amusing when I hear Paul Carlson from Canada on his UA-cam channel Mr Carlson's Lab pronounce the L when he mentions solder. I never heard it pronounced with the L since I started soldering back in the early 60's. BTW, if you want to learn about electronics there is no better place on the internet to learn than at Mr Carlson's Lab. Maybe Danny could do some educational videos about designing crossovers and also about acoustics. I know I would be very interested.

  • @ericschulze5641
    @ericschulze5641 3 роки тому

    I take a piece of wet cotton string and wrap it around the factory connections just to be safe

  • @domicdom2483
    @domicdom2483 4 роки тому +2

    WHY solder? You don't have to solder the other end of the speaker wire that connects to the receiver's speaker left or right input, you just insert the wire and tighten by rotating the red or black plastic fitting that holds the wire in place forever in which the wire end doesn't tarnish, its always a perfect connection without soldering. Why not have the same fittings that you tighten by hand to hold each wire on a 3 way crossover or speaker? You explain soldering quite calmly when a little mistake will ruin the 3 way crossover. When you hold that extremely heated tool what if the solder melts and then drips out of place and doesn't solder the wire, as this happened to me many times. Then if you apply the solder again you can damage the circuit board or crossover. Soldering is a very risky and painful method to connect wires, especially to the circuit board of a 3 way crossover. Ya gotta be a computer robot machine to do this with perfection.

    • @harryberry474
      @harryberry474 3 роки тому

      Dominic dom...watch video again start at 00:43 to 02:00 and he explains why, Danny firmly believes in point to point soldering as much as possible of course you can't solder speaker wire to your amp but everything speaker binding post Inside cabinet to speaker the best purest connection is point to point soldering this includes crossover. He sells "Tube Connectors" that replace the typical binding post connection which are pure copper...but you're correct you don't "have to solder"...it's just the best connection possible.He talks about this a lot almost every video!

  • @LourencoPT
    @LourencoPT 4 роки тому +1

    Hi Danny! Any difference in using solid or stranded wire in terms of sound quality? Thank you.

    • @dannyrichie9743
      @dannyrichie9743 4 роки тому +1

      Some, but there is an even bigger difference in the dielectric material.

  • @fearnpol4938
    @fearnpol4938 3 роки тому +1

    Almost correct but the tinning of the wire had way too much solder on it and the solder should NEVER go up to the insulation as it can wick up inside and weaken the joint you make.

  • @kerbyfab
    @kerbyfab 3 роки тому

    A lot of her singles are on Tidal, Apple Music, etc..

  • @FerventDissent
    @FerventDissent 4 роки тому

    They have 7 song on amazon music, all higher than cd quality, but not dust in the wind.

  • @robertdavis5714
    @robertdavis5714 3 роки тому

    Push-on wire speaker connector, it must be 30 yrs since I have seen that done, gave away my age on that response.

  • @DimitarDobrinov
    @DimitarDobrinov 3 роки тому

    Focus.... fouuuucaaassss :D Just kidding, thank you for the great video, it is very helpful, like all your videos! :)

  • @ThatGuyAM
    @ThatGuyAM 2 роки тому

    Dammit. I thought the wire on the windowsill was a hair on my phone screen. Can’t watch the video it’s bothering me so badly.

  • @monkeymanstones1
    @monkeymanstones1 4 роки тому

    Copper? Copper? You want copper in your signal path? Give me Silver Ag, all the way. No better sound and audio range than that provided by Silver. Copper isn't necessarily bad, but Silver is absolutely superior. Signals move fastest through Silver as scientific testing shows. Worst case to cut down the volume of Silver used, place it only in the woofer signal path to help the woofer almost keep up with the tweeter. Signal will arrive at the woofer first such that it can begin overcoming its inertia due to it's weight before the signal reaches the tweeter. Thereby the 2 are kept closer in response time.

    • @StewartMarkley
      @StewartMarkley 4 роки тому

      The velocity of the electrical signal in a wire is controlled by the insulation dielectric not the wire. Even if it was affected by the wire, the woofer and tweeter would have to be about 300 meters apart for the signal to arrive just one microsecond apart in time given with a velocity factor of close to 100% which is the case for speaker wires. But anyway electrical signals travel the same speed in silver, copper, or any other conductor material.

    • @monkeymanstones1
      @monkeymanstones1 4 роки тому

      @@StewartMarkley Foundations of Analog and Digital Circuits by Anant Agarwal Jeffrey Lang (ISBN: 9781558607354, 1st July 2005): "If we are interested in signal speeds that are comparable to the speed of electromagnetic waves, then the lumped matter discipline is violated, and therefore we cannot use the lumped circuit abstraction"

    • @monkeymanstones1
      @monkeymanstones1 4 роки тому

      @@StewartMarkley nordost.com/downloads/Leif%20brochure_LREnglish.pdf Even some of the finest wires on earth present varying velocities. Within the PDF note as low as 80% and as high as 96%. There would be no benefit to Nordost whatsoever to be dishonest in their documentation material. A 16% difference in relation to the speed of light is not meaningless at all. Woofers have greater inertia due to their substantially higher mass. Therefore ensuring signals reach them first increases the odds that they will overcome said inertia so as to produce sound more equal to that of a far lower inertia, lower mass tweeter.
      But thank you for your attempted insult of me.

    • @monkeymanstones1
      @monkeymanstones1 4 роки тому

      But, Silver does have a cleaner and wider frequency response range, making their use with tweeters superior. Yet keeping a woofer closer in timing to the midrange and especially tweeter seems far more beneficial as the sound will appear more honest and clearer.

    • @StewartMarkley
      @StewartMarkley 4 роки тому

      @@monkeymanstones1 Man, you have really bought into the Nordost sales and marketing hype. But even they admit that the velocity of the signal is a matter of the insulation and not the wire. But that aside, with the educated guess that the risetime of a typical woofer is about 100 microseconds crossing over to a infinitely fast tweeter, and the maximum difference in velocity of cables being 16% of the speed of light or 48 meters per microsecond, the length of the woofer cable would have to be 4800 meters shorter than the tweeter cable for the acoustic risetimes to be synchronized.
      This leaves us with at least three questions:
      1. Would anyone ever use a tweeter speaker cable that is 4800 meters (3 miles) longer than a woofer cable?
      2. What would the resistance, inductance and capacitance difference be of the 3 mile tweeter cable vs. the woofer cable?
      3. Could anyone hear a difference if such a setup was possible?

  • @keithbickerdike4621
    @keithbickerdike4621 3 роки тому

    I don't solder because I always need to take my speakers apart after I built them because they never sound right ...

  • @ImTiredOfFindingAGoodHandle
    @ImTiredOfFindingAGoodHandle 5 місяців тому

    thanks, i still did a terrible job, but thanks
    update: even though i did a terrible job it still worked somehow

  • @think2023
    @think2023 3 роки тому +1

    Really missed the boat on selecting the correct solder....and venting if using the common eutectic 60/40 lead tin solder.
    Maybe inhaling lead fumes makes you think a mechanical connection isnt better than solder only.
    In fact..with a mechanical connection first..much lest chance of undesireable crystalization from movement (aka cold solder joint) besides you have good electrical connection mechanically...soldering just adds longevity and insurance.

    • @dannyrichie9743
      @dannyrichie9743 3 роки тому

      Crimped connections aren't possible on drivers.

    • @think2023
      @think2023 3 роки тому +1

      @@dannyrichie9743 but mechanical connection still possible..several ways.
      That said...ur method works....as long as perfectly still as solder solidifies

  • @genez429
    @genez429 4 роки тому

    My fear is with fine wired tweeters.

  • @josephsaucedo8691
    @josephsaucedo8691 3 роки тому

    That why in car audio there direct leads what I don't understand it why isn't every thing copper ever thing is a different metal car and home audio I never seen everything the same type all the way to The amp/receiver. The speaker post are not copper and a extra fitting as well.🎵🎶👍👌✌️💯🥂