Best Hookup Wire? (for component internal wiring)

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What have people found to be the "best" hookup wire for wiring up a component?
Line-stage, amp... whatever...

What gauge is desirable too?

For both power and signal, respectively..

Solid or stranded...

Twisted or not......

Shielded or not...

Silver or copper?

Etc. or etc. (any other considerations I may have omitted)

Not nescessarily the most expensive...
What makes an audible difference and why?
VS. what is just hype.....

TIA!

Hmmm... maybe this should have gone under "Parts" forum??
 
20-22 AWG stranded. UL1007 (300 V) or UL1015 (600 V) depending on the voltages in the circuit. Copper because the electrons don't care much about copper vs silver. For higher current connections internal to a chassis, I go up to 16 AWG. It's plenty of cross-sectional area and still quite malleable.

If you're in the US, Remington has good deals on wire: https://www.remingtonindustries.com/hook-up-wire/

Mouser and Digi-Key carry hookup wire by the foot as well.

I use red/black/blue for the +/0/- on split power supplies.

Tom
 
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By definition hookup wire is not shielded/screened. However, some internal connections may need to be screened/shielded so for those do not use hookup wire. Some people get away with using twisted wire for these connections, but twisted wire is really for balanced connections. However, twisted should be used for AC heaters and other AC wiring - including the charging pulse loop in the power supply.

The best hookup wire depends on the application. Use wire which is thick enough to cope with the current, even when under a hot chassis. Insulation should be thick enough to cope with the voltage. A variety of colours will help you debug; this will help us debug remotely too if you need assistance. Solid core stays where you put it; stranded is more flexible; audio signals don't care. Don't use silver - unnecessary for audio.

You will get an audible difference if you don't screen a wire which should be screened, or don't twist a wire which should be twisted - in both case you will get hum or buzz. Apart from that audio does not worry about wires so you should not worry.
 
I like teflon or kynar insulation for my point to point projects where the soldering iron gets waved around a lot. Surplus houses have this sometimes, sometimes e-bay. Solid is only useful if the circuit goes in and stays there. Where I have to take the board out several times for debug, some solid will fracture, especially NTE. Belden solid was better but still broke after 10 board moves or so. Stranded teflon silver plate 24 from Alpha or Belden is a lot of fun, but about $.60 a foot.
24 ga for signals, 22 from the drivers to the output transistors, 18 in the power supply. I'll use PVC insulation where I need a unique color or don't think I'll be in there to modify anything, but I've had to replace some runs that I burned. Especially annoying in vacuum tube circuits where the wire you burned is on the bottom of the eyelet with 6 wires or component leads on top of it. Watch voltage rating with vacuum tube stuff, lots of hookup wire is 300 v rated. Not enough for plates and screens, only the filament.
 
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I use solid twisted CAT5 for audio signal, cheap and good quality copper. Do not use solid wires for power connections, it can easly break and your Amp will loose +/- or ground and will burn, been there, done that.

I am now testing my setup with Brandrex Cat5E shielded solid wires cable. 2 conductors for signal and two for neutral each conductor either signal or neutral are taken from each twisted pair and soldered together , the foil screen is only connected to one end neutral.
The sound is clean and powerfull but also a bit laid back in clarity.
So now will test with awg20 silver plated copperwire Teflon insulated wire, 2 wires for neutral and one for signal twisted together.
 
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