AFAIK, there is no speaker maker who has this type of binding posts. If patentable, (I'm sure it is) why don't you apply for a patent Suri![]()
how does one go about this? - absolutely no idea - but would surely like to have a binding post called SBT !(suri's binding tee!) - which would compete with WBT!!!:lol:
Patenting in India is fine but if keen to protect your intellectual property, you need to apply for patent at USPTO (United States Patent & Trademark Office). Takes about 3 yrs.
Hi Suri,
Congratulations on your newly made speakers and the binding posts. About the binding posts, I like to say one thing: I have always been unhappy with banana and spades. Spades are better I feel, because one can tighten, but still for various reasons I have not liked them either. As a result I have been using bare wire for speakers for the last nearly 30 years. Bare wires have their own problems with oxidation etc, and once in a while you have to scrape off and tighten etc. I'd like to know your reasons for designing these new type of binding posts.
Regards.
You might want to think about air gaps in the mating surfaces. As tight as you can make it, you still have two halves connecting to each other through the diameter of the clamped wire.
It is still an excellent connection, but I think you will need to have some kind of preform on the wires (solder? plated lug?) to ensure a truly gas-tight connection. As it is, it is not so. The wires are going to deform under pressure and over time, this is something that will need to be handled before you implement it. Basically, I see it as a kind of a bare wire connection, very similar to the nut and bolt system used by most manufacturers, just slightly different. I could arguably simulate the connection by using a binding post that allows you to directly solder to it (some WBTs, most Cardas) instead of a bolted lug, and a bare wire connection.
Silver melts at 1000 degrees C. Most silver solder melts at around 600 degrees. If you've used alloy solder (lead/tin/silver) on pure silver, it will simply not do - the construction is not rigid and the contact is not evenA one-piece post will probably be better, even if is plated brass.
Try to think of a solution where the entire post/receptacle is a single piece, and can take a wire fastened directly to it using an insert. Also think of the incoming wire being crimped on to the insert mechanically, filled with solder *before* it mates.
I apologise if this is sounding pedantic and argumentative. I'm simply trying to improve the design.