This particular set is a prototype. I call them the A.D. Skinners, or just "Skinners" for short. The "Mulders" are still in the design phase and a prototype will be available a few months from now.
Here at Morbius Labs, each 12 gauge silver plated copper wire has a durable Teflon protective sheath and is delicately braided with the finest Swiss craftsmanship to provide MINIMUM noise and MAXIMUM sonic benefit for audiophiles. This speaker wire meets the military's toughest standards.
Using Teflon has a twofold advantage over the more commonly used PVC. First, it's very resistant to heat so you can blast your speakers at uber high wattages day and night until your ears bleed without fear of melting your speaker cables. Second, Teflon doesn't decompose and off gass corrosive oxygen the way PVC does, so your A.D. Skinners will sounds as good 100 years from now as they do today.
The svelte European styled connectors provide MAXIMUM electrical contact inside most 5-way binding post that are widely used in the industry today.
These are actually red and black in spite of the camera. I have a new camera but am not yet familiar with it. Plus I'm basically a bad photographer.


Here at Morbius Labs, each 12 gauge silver plated copper wire has a durable Teflon protective sheath and is delicately braided with the finest Swiss craftsmanship to provide MINIMUM noise and MAXIMUM sonic benefit for audiophiles. This speaker wire meets the military's toughest standards.
Using Teflon has a twofold advantage over the more commonly used PVC. First, it's very resistant to heat so you can blast your speakers at uber high wattages day and night until your ears bleed without fear of melting your speaker cables. Second, Teflon doesn't decompose and off gass corrosive oxygen the way PVC does, so your A.D. Skinners will sounds as good 100 years from now as they do today.
The svelte European styled connectors provide MAXIMUM electrical contact inside most 5-way binding post that are widely used in the industry today.
These are actually red and black in spite of the camera. I have a new camera but am not yet familiar with it. Plus I'm basically a bad photographer.



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