connect 2 different wire gauge to pos and neg speaker terminal


what happens if say Kimber kable 12 tc to pos and lowes 10 gauge grounding wire to neg side or 12 tc biwire  to pos and lamp cord to neg
chalmersiv
Speaking of DIY speaker cables.

Here is an interesting post from Charles Hansen.

Bill Waslo is Right - Your Amp is Oscillating
If a solid-state amp is running hot for no apparent reason, it is almost *always* because it is oscillating - usually in the MHz range - so you will never hear it.

The fact that it does so with certain configurations of speaker cables is simply due to the capacitance of those cables. The vast majority of solid-state power amplifiers have an emitter-follower circuit in its output stage. Nominally this has a maximum voltage gain of <1, so there is no way for it to oscillate.

But bipolar transistors turn out to have a mechanism whereby a capacitive load at the output causes an emitter-follower to have a negative input impedance at the base, and the darned thing will oscillate. (This is the basis of the well-known Colpitts oscillator circuit.)

That is clearly what is happening with your amplifier. Normally amplifier manufacturers do all sorts of things to prevent this from happening, including using an inductor at the output (to isolate the amplifier from the capacitive load) and adding Zobel networks (to "swamp out" potential capacitances that can cause problems). Many of these band-aids degrade the sound quality, but it is better to have a mediocre amp that works than a great sounding amplifier that doesn’t work... :-)

I am extremely surprised that your McIntosh would do this. It’s not like it was designed by some beginner in his garage. But clearly they have dropped the ball on this particular design. I would contact them to see if they have an update.

All of this first became a well-known problem with the introduction of the very first "high-end" speaker cable - imported from Japan by Polk Audio (!), it was called "Cobra Cable" and it looked a lot like Kimber Kable, with many fine strands woven together - much in the same way a rope is woven. All of those strands create a very high capacitance, and Cobra Cable blew up many, *many* high-end amplifiers.

https://www.audioasylum.com/forums/amp/messages/22/220668.html

Hansen responded to this posted message.

What I didn’t know

You know, I never knew that by tri-wiring speakers that it would create a heavier load on the amplifier but it appears to be true. At least in my case. If you look at some of my latest posts I was having trouble with heat generation in my McIntosh 7270 that powers my Alon V's that are tri-wired with Alon's Black Orpheus cables.
https://www.audioasylum.com/forums/amp/messages/22/220657.html