Question:

What weight of blanket?

Hi there,I had a blanket questionI have a three and a half year horse filly and even though I don't blanket her I would like to have a winter turnout one on hand just in caseThe lowest temperature it can get up here is -5 F? during the winterSo it would be great if you guys had any suggestions on what type and weight of blanket I should get for her that would be awesome!Thank you so much :)

Answer:

i would bridge it to get the most power then just run your wires like hooking up a normal amp
Think I'm gonna screamOk, there is a big difference, you are talking Analog, which is still just fine if reproduced correctly, and it comes down to wire resistance and impedanceI won't go into the physics, but, buy good quality, yes, Gold connectionsGold has better conductivity then just cheap metalPlus, Gold will not corrode which deteriorates the connectionMonster is a placeboMonster cable is 80% marketingIs it good cable? AbsolutelyCan your human ears hear the difference between $100 wire and $500 wire? No, they cannotI don't care who you areIs this fraud? NoA piece of extremely sensitive piece of equipment called an Oscilliscope saw the difference in qualitySo, even if your ears didn't hear the difference, this is how it remains legal and not fraud to sell this higher quality wireThat said, you can buy wire that you can plainly see and hear poor qualityThe classic black wire found in Radio ShackSmall guage wire has higher resistance, thus will impede signal flowSo, long story boring, stay middle of the roadRight around $25-$40 for a set of Gold plated RCA Audio/Video wires is quite sufficient, and you will notice if you go cheaper, and will not notice if you go more expensiveMake sure you run true Video wire for the Video runs as Video impedance is importantAs for comparing RCA jacks to DVI, HDMI, etc., it is irrevelent as these are in the digital realm and your question was in the Analog realmIf you want to talk Digital, watch everything go to HDMIBut, for that, you will need another quarter.
If she is able to stand the cold weather usually and has a good, thick coat, I would go with a medium (250g) to a medium-heavy blanket (around 300-350g)My TB has a 250g medium Amigo (by Rambo) blanket, and my mixed pony mare has a 180g light blanketIt only gets down to around 15 ?F here, thoughAlso, try to buy a 1000+ denier blanket that is waterproof; the higher denier almost guarantees less repair work on the blanket due to wear and tearHope this helps!

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