Combining different speaker cables for bi-wiring?


After spending the past few weeks trying different types of speaker cables with my system, I narrow down my choice to two brands of cables but I couldn’t choose on more than another.
The first cable I liked was giving all the details and dynamics I was looking for the highs and mids, but was lacking punch and solidity for the bass.
The second one I picked was giving me all the punch and fullness in the lows, but was too bright in the high frequencies.
Should I bi-wire my speakers using the first type of cable to drive the highs and the second type of cable to drive the lows?
Is that a common thing to do?
Would that affect timing and pacing between treble and bass?
Thanks for helping.
Cheers,
mboimare
open the amp and make sure your speaker cable is the same brand of cables used inside.
If you prefer the frequency characteristics of the different cables it makes sense to use them where they sound best. Some manufacturers use different wire gauges or materials in their cables meant for internal biwire to take advantage of those characteristics. You found them on your own.
My experience is that chosing one cable for its low-producing cabability and chosing the second cable for its mid/highs can make a huge difference. I've had three sets of biwire speaker cables, upgrading each time. I noticed the improvement over using jumpers, but nothing like when I started wiring for the traits of the two frequency ranges. The best I've achieved thus far is high-end MIT cable for the high/mids and a silver hybrid for the bass. I reasoned that the silver would tighten up my bass, and that's exactly what it did.
Interesting thread.

I bi-wire with DH Labs and use the 14ga T14 on tweeter and the heavier 10ga Q10 on midbass driver on my ACI Jaguar monitors.
This has been recommended by many users in using DH Labs in a bi-wire setup. The wire is the same I believe, though, just different gauges.
I don't see why, in general, there would be a problem using different speaker wire brands unless there is some specific requirement for capacitance or inductance.