Concealing loudspeaker wire – Niles Audio Niles HDFX User Manual

Page 13

Advertising
background image

NILES AUDIO CORPORATION – 1-800-BUY-HIFI – 305-238-4373

11

CONCEALING LOUDSPEAKER WIRE

ABOUT INTERIOR WALLS

Interior walls in almost all North American residences are hollow, so they are easy installation sites

for fl ush mounting loudspeakers and routing new loudspeaker cable in the house. Looking at a

painted wallboard, plaster, or paneling, you only see the skin of the wall. Behind it is the home’s

skeleton; 2-by-4 inch wood or metal “studs” running vertically from the fl oor to the ceiling in walls

and 2-by-6 inch or larger “joists” running horizontally in the ceilings and fl oors. The space between

the studs and joists is used for the home’s wiring and plumbing.

ABOUT EXTERIOR WALLS

Concealing wires in exterior walls is more complex, since the walls are stuffed with insulation to

protect the house from the heat and cold outside. Moreover, our national building code requires

that a horizontal stud placed between the vertical studs break the hollow wall space in exterior

walls. This “fi re blocking” makes it very diffi cult to retrofi t long lengths of wire. In some areas

of the country, the exterior walls are constructed of solid masonry and have no hollow space for

loudspeakers or wires.

PLANNING THE LOUDSPEAKER WIRE ROUTE

Start by examining all the possible routes you

might take to run the loudspeaker wire from the

loudspeaker to the home theater system. Use a

stud sensor or other device to locate the internal

structure of the wall. You will want to avoid all studs

or joists. Figure 6 shows a typical wire run from

the loudspeaker location in the wall, across the attic,

then down through a top plate (i.e., the horizontal

2-by-4 or 2-by-6 inch wood laid across the vertical

studs) to a wall plate or a J-Box in the wall behind

the home theater system itself.

Find all the locations of your existing electrical,

phone, and TV wiring, and then plan the loudspeaker

wire route to avoid them. Crossing wire paths is

acceptable, but 60 Hz hum may be induced in the

reproduced audio if loudspeaker wire is run paral-

lel to electrical wire for more than a few feet. If

possible, try to keep loudspeaker wire away from

parallel power cables by at least 3 feet.

loudspeaker
Location

Volume
Control
Location

Stereo
Location

Figure 6. Running loudspeaker wire
from a wall loudspeaker to a home theater
system location.

(CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE)

Advertising