terminals cannot accept 10 or 12 AWG wire, you can use a banana or pin plug to
connect the wire to the speaker terminal.
Whatever speaker wire you get, make sure that it has marks to identify one conductor
from another. Most speaker wire uses a colored stripe to identify one of the conductors.
The identified conductor is usually used for the positive (+/red) connection and the other
for the negative (-/black) side.
Note: When cutting speaker wire, ensure that the length of each stereo pair is the same.
This ensures that the overall impedance of each channel is identical. If there is any
excess speaker wire, it should not be coiled, as it could create an antenna to receive
stray radio signals. Instead, snake the excess wire back and forth.
RCA Cables
You will need stereo RCA cables to connect at least one of the source devices to the
amplifier's source inputs. In most cases these will be relatively short connections, so
ordinary RCA cables are sufficient. However, if the distance is longer than about 15-20
feet (4.5-6 meters), it is recommended to use RCA cables manufactured using shielded
RG6 or RG59 cable. RG59 can connect to distances up to about 131 feet (40 meters),
while RG6 can make reliable connections to distances up to about 328 feet (100
meters).
Trigger Cables
This amplifier includes one trigger input and one trigger output. The trigger output can
be connected to the trigger input of responsive devices, such as projection screens,
lighting systems, curtain motors, etc. The trigger input allows an alternate method of
powering the amplifier on and off.
The trigger signal is a low-current 12 VDC, which is carried between systems with a
two-conductor cable that terminates in a 3.5mm TS plug. You can also use standard, off
the shelf 3-conductor audio patch cables that terminate in 3.5mm TRS plugs.
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