Niles CM8SW Installation & Operation Manual page 12

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bottom
of the ceiling
joists.
Then
work
backward
so that you can always
see the
holes you have already drilled.
Paying care-
ful attention
to this will
save you a lot of
time later on!
Pulling the Cable
Pull the cable in sections (from the stereo to
the volume
control,
from the volume
con-
trol to the speaker).
Start with
the longest
sections
and use left over wire to complete
the short sections.
If you plan to pull many
rooms
at the same time through
a central
route, walk off the distance
to each destina-
tion, add a generous
fudge factor for turns
and other obstacles,
then cut off each sec-
tion so that you have a bundle
of wires you
can pull at once.
Whenever
you run the wire
further
than
four and one half feet from a hole in a stud
or joist (open attic space,
going
up walls,
etc.), fasten the wire to the joists or studs
using cable
clamps
or appropriately
sized
wire
staples.
The wire
should
not have
large sags in it, nor should
it be too tight.
Try to protect
the wire from being stepped
on in attics
or other
unfinished
crawl
spaces.
There
are guard
strips,
raceways
and conduits
which
can be used to protect
the cable.
Consult
the local building
code
for special requirements
in your area.
Concealing
Speaker Wire in
Existing Walls
This is actually
a fairly
simple
task if you
restrict
your
choice
of speaker
locations
and wire
routes to the ceilings
or interior
walls of your home. Interior walls in almost
all North
American
resrdences
are hollow,
so it is easy to flush
mount
speakers
into
them and route new speaker cable around
the house. What you see when you look at
the painted
wall board, plaster, or paneling
is only the skin of the wall.
Behind the skin
is the skeleton;
two-by-four
wood
or metal
"studs"
running
vertically
from the floor to
the ceiling
in walls and two-by-six
or larger
"joists"
running
horizontally
in the ceilings
and floors.
In between
the studs and the
joists is the space for the wiring
and plumb-
ing of your home.
Exterior walls are different.
They must insu-
late the house from the heat and cold out-
side, so they are stuffed with insulation.
The
national
building
code requires that the hol-
low wall space in exterior
walls be broken
by a horizontal
stud placed
between
the
vertical
studs. This "fire blocking"
makes it
very difficult
to retrofit
long lengths of wire.
tn some areas of the country
the exterior
walls are constructed
of solid masonry,
and
have no hollow
space for speaker wires.
Start by examining
all the possible
routes
you
might
take to run the speaker
wire
from
the speaker
to the volume
control
and back to the stereo. Use a stud sensor
or other device
to locate the internal
struc-
ture of the ceiling/wall.
You want to avoid
as many studs or joists as possible.
A typi-
cal speaker
wire route would
be: from the
speaker
location
in the ceiling,
across the
attic, then down
through
a top plate (the
horizontal
2x4 or 2x6 laid across the vett-
cal studs) to the volume
control
location,
back up to the attic, across the attic, and
finally
down
another
wall
plate to a j-box
in the wall
behind
the stereo system
itself
(See Figure 11).
Identify
where all of your electrical,
phone,
and TV wiring
IS likely
to be and plan to
route
around
it all. You can accidentally
induce
60Hz
hum on your speakers
if you
run your speaker
wire
right beside electri-
cal wire
for more than
a few feet. Try to
run speaker
wire
parallel
to power
cables
at least 3 feet away. To find exactly
where
an electrical
cable
is routed,
try Inspecting
the inside
of the wall
by turning
off the
breaker
for a particular
power
outlet
or

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