Monoprice Speaker Wire, CMP Rated, 2-Conductor, 18AWG, 250ft, Black
Product # 13731
UPC # 889028017807
$63.99
*Affirm is not available for business or international orders
Qty:
Out of Stock
ETA: 11/12/2024
Note:
Due to limited supply, all products are sold on a first-come first-serve basis. Auto Notification does not guarantee either availability or price. All prices are subject to change without notice.
*Your information will only be used to notify you when this item becomes available.
Qty: 1
$63.99
Qty: 2-9
$62.99
Qty: 10-19
$61.99
Qty: 20-49
$60.99
Qty: 50+
$59.99
Customers Also Shopped For
Questions and Answers
Do not include HTML, links, references to other stores, pricing or contact info.
My question is about:
If your question is about more than one item, click + to add them.
Browse 108 questions
Browse 108 questions
and 114 answers
What is printed on the jacket? I'm looking to use 16 or 18 gauge, 2 and 4 conductor wire. This says that it is UL rated - is that UL number on the jacket?
James W
on Dec 18, 2018
Monoprice Speaker Wire, CMP Rated, 2-Conductor, 18AWG, 250ft, Black
Monoprice Speaker Wire, CMP Rated, 2-Conductor, 16AWG, 50ft, Black
Monoprice Speaker Wire, CMP Rated, 4-Conductor, 16AWG, 250ft, Black
Monoprice Speaker Wire, CMP Rated, 4-Conductor, 12AWG, 100ft, Black
Monoprice Speaker Wire, CMP Rated, 4-Conductor, 18AWG, 100ft, Black
BEST ANSWER: The actual ul # is not on the jacket, it has been tested by "Underwriters Laboratories" to pass safety standards, the actual UL # is unnecessary.
- Reply(1)
- Inaccurate
- michael on Mar 17, 2019
How do you prove it was tested by UL to pass those safety standards? Having the number on the jacket prevents issues like we had around the time that I asked that question, (which must have been months ago, by the way). We install commercially, and we were using a wire that did not have the UL number on the jacket. We had to return to a location to remove all of that wiring and replace it with one that had the correct UL number listed on it. Unfortunately, we ran into a very tough local inspector there. Having the UL number on the jacket, or at least documentation that we can carry with us, would help when we run into those types of inspectors.
BEST ANSWER: The actual ul # is not on the jacket, it has been tested by "Underwriters Laboratories" to pass safety standards, the actual UL # is unnecessary.
- Reply(1)
- Inaccurate
- michael on Mar 17, 2019
How do you prove it was tested by UL to pass those safety standards? Having the number on the jacket prevents issues like we had around the time that I asked that question, (which must have been months ago, by the way). We install commercially, and we were using a wire that did not have the UL number on the jacket. We had to return to a location to remove all of that wiring and replace it with one that had the correct UL number listed on it. Unfortunately, we ran into a very tough local inspector there. Having the UL number on the jacket, or at least documentation that we can carry with us, would help when we run into those types of inspectors.
Vote for the best answer above!
what is the diameter of the 13732 cable? 18/2c Nimbus
A shopper
on Oct 7, 2021
Monoprice Speaker Wire, CMP Rated, 2-Conductor, 18AWG, 250ft, Black
Monoprice Speaker Wire, CMP Rated, 2-Conductor, 18AWG, 50ft, Black
Monoprice Speaker Wire, CMP Rated, 2-Conductor, 18AWG, 100ft, Black
Monoprice Speaker Wire, CMP Rated, 2-Conductor, 18AWG, 500ft, Black
Vote for the best answer above!
What is the voltage rating. Does it work on 70V Speaker System. Is this 18awg suitable for 100 feet long and 30W on 70V system?
Edmund C
on Mar 19, 2022
BEST ANSWER: I believe this would be a good solution for your 70 volt system. Since you are running a longer distance (which 70v systems typically do), I would also consider what is near/close to your speaker environment. Longer runs like this are fine from a voltage/current/wire gage perspective, but what becomes a greater concern is picking up noise from other sources like radio & TV transmitting stations. Longer speaker wire runs are susceptible to RFI, EMI, and other noisy anomalies. If I could find something shielded, I would consider that first.
- Reply
- Inaccurate
- Brian C R on Mar 21, 2022
BEST ANSWER: I believe this would be a good solution for your 70 volt system. Since you are running a longer distance (which 70v systems typically do), I would also consider what is near/close to your speaker environment. Longer runs like this are fine from a voltage/current/wire gage perspective, but what becomes a greater concern is picking up noise from other sources like radio & TV transmitting stations. Longer speaker wire runs are susceptible to RFI, EMI, and other noisy anomalies. If I could find something shielded, I would consider that first.
- Reply
- Inaccurate
- Brian C R on Mar 21, 2022
Vote for the best answer above!
Reviews
4.6 / 5.0
169 Reviews
5 Stars
4 Stars
3 Stars
2 Stars
1 Star
132
22
6
5
4