All these speaker cables have been stored in closets – it’s time for them to have new homes.
14 ft Monster Cable Powerline 2 “Time Coherent” cable – terminated with spade lugs.
Price: $85 (includes shipping w/in CONUS & Paypal)
2 pairs of 5 ft. Monster Cable M1 “Sonic Reference” cable – terminated with spade lugs. These were either never used, or used only briefly (can’t recall).
Price: $65/pair (includes shipping w/in CONUS & Paypal)
2 pairs of 2 ft. Monster Cable M1 “Sonic Reference” cable – terminated with spade lugs. These were never used. Note: these are ideal for monoblock amps located right behind speakers.
Price: Make me an offer
14 ft. Straightwire Teflon-12 “The Music Conductor” (grey) – terminated with spade lugs.
Price: $85 (includes shipping w/in CONUS & Paypal)
13.5 ft. Straightwire Teflon-12 “The Music Conductor” (tan//brown) – terminated with spade lugs.
Price: $85 (includes shipping w/in CONUS & Paypal)
2 Likes
I had some of the M1 speaker cables back in the day. That was really top end stuff in the early 1990s.
Somebody talented could cut those in half and make some high end speaker jumpers.
Yes, it was top-shelf cable back in the late '80s/early '90s. But it’s rather thick…hard to use as jumpers unless you stripped off all the external cladding.
Hello @Pharmaboy did you sell the longer lengths of these? I am working on a project and might be able to use the either of the 14" cables. Let me know, thanks!
Mark: Thanks for contacting me.
The 2 X 13.5 ft. Straightwire pairs are gone. The 14 ft. Monster Cable Powerline 2 cable is still available.
Where are you (don’t see it in your profile). I’m in mid-state New York.
Thanks!
Peter
Hey Peter, Thanks for writing back. I’m in Denver. I’m building an open baffle experiment and these would probably work for me. The Monster Powerline looks relatively flexible, maybe?
I’ll message you and we can work out the $$.
Thanks,
Mark
Sounds good. Monster Cable Powerline is suprisingly pliable/bendable, considering how thick it is.
By comparison, the Straighwire cables weren’t as thick, but were far less flexible.