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Connect one banana plug to the black (female ?) end of the speaker wire, and another plug to the red (male ?) end of the wire. The plugs are marked as red or white.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.If I understand your question correctly, the connectors securely hold various gauges of stranded wire. I did not try any solid wire but suspect only small gauge solid wire may work because the pieces may not mate properly with larger gauges of wire.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.Not sure if you are asking if these are capable of Bi-wiring but yes these are single wire connectors....The female end should be either on your speakers or receiver.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.These are meant to be single wire connectors. By that, the single piece or length of wire should run the complete distance between your amplifier (or receiver) output to the inpuut of the speaker. The ends of the wire are male connections (when these connectors are attached) which are meant to plug into the female connection points on the back of the amplifier/receiver and the speaker. I am not aware of female connectors sold for the purpose of connecting wires to audio equipment. I have only seen and used the male banana connectors on the ends of speaker wires.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.These are single wire connectors. If you want to use banana plugs vice bare wire, you will need two red and two black for each speaker / wire. The female connections are found on the receiver/amp and the speakers themselves. They are not designed for patching / splicing two lengths of wire together, if that is what you were looking to do (my interpretation based on the "female connector" part of your question).
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.These are for speaker wire. You attach them to the individual wires. Then they plug into the back of the receiver/amp and the back of the speaker. So the female end is only found on the back of speakers and receivers/amps.
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