Why shouldn't I bi-wire Wilson Watt/Puppies 6


I just aquired a pr of WWP6's and saw in a review that "Wilson will void the warrentee if one bi-amps or bi-wires these speakers". I have a pr. of bi-wire Nordost SPM reference that I would like to use but this has got me scratching my head. I just set the room this morning using a pr. of Cary 805b amps. The speaker wires are plugged into the 8ohm and 4ohm taps on the Carys and then bi-wired to the Wilsons. Nothing has been turned on yet as I had to go to work, (where I'm writing this from;-) If anyone can enlighten me as to any possible problems from this setup, it would be appreciated. I don't want to have to wait to talk to Wilson on Tues before playing some tunes!
rloggie
Void the warranty? Sounds silly to me. They may recommend not biwiring because they think they sound better with their own jumpers, but there is nothing that could damage the speakers with biwiring.

How could they void the warranty? They could never prove you operated them this way.

Are you intending to use the 8 ohm and 4 ohm taps at the same time? The cabinet hooked to the 8 ohm tap will be getting more power. You should you use the same tap for both cabinets.
" I don't want to have to wait to talk to Wilson on Tues before playing some tunes! "

Why wait? Just connect one run of your Nordost cables and cap of the other set to insure you don't shot something out. Then talk to Wilson when you get a chance.

Enjoy,

TIC
The amp side of the wires have bananas, so I can't connect both to the same tap. Running one part of the wire is happening at 6:30 tonight, can't wait. As far as the 8 ohm and 4 ohm taps putting out different amounts of power, wouldn't matter would it if they are both connected to the puppy binding post?? I'm really only running two sets of speaker wire to the same binding post from two different taps, 8 and 4 ohm. See any problems?
I'm really only running two sets of speaker wire to the same binding post from two different taps, 8 and 4 ohm.

Perhaps I'm confused but it sounds to me like you would be shorting out 1/2 of your output transformer, which would be a major problem. Don't do this unless you are positive you are doing it correctly or you could do some serious damage to the amp.

I like the other idea of using 1/2 the cable and leaving the others disconnected.