Of course it should.Speaking of cables for speakers i can't help but notice how thin a woofer's voice coil wire "normally" is. (i understand that some high end woofers have quite thicker coils).
I don't have a precise datum of its gauge and length but if we talk about possible bottleneck for the current it seems to be this one and certainly not a decent section and reasonable length speaker cable.
A bobbin wire looks little more than a hair's size. And its resistance should be order of magnitude bigger than the speaker cable resistance ?
i had a broken coil in one of my speakers and it was extremely thin ...
Thank you very much for your kind and valuable reply. But it seems to me weird to look for speaker cables with the section of a water hose that end in a hair thick voice coil.Of course it should.
This is the motor in the speaker, it will have a resistance of several ohms. This is the bit the speaker cable is intended to deliver current to!
Same here. And also some cables based on other Lapp Oelflex series for longer runs to the surrounds.My speaker cables are self-made one's Bi-Amping wires with the Lapp Oelflex Classic 110 with 4x 6mm2 on each wire for my 3 front speakers.
For my surrounds due to space limitations around the wall, I have the type, just in a smaller diameter.