Are cables really worth their high price because of their geometry?


They’re some pricey cables that have claim to fame because of the high tech geometry used in their cables.
Many of these cables have patents on specific geometry patterns used in their cables and use this as a reason their cables sound so good. For that reason, many say the reason their cables cost so much is they’re so complex . The man hours to make a pr results in their high price. That maybe true for some cables, but I’ve seen very pricey cables using the same geometry reason that look like a thin piece of wire rapped in outer jacket no thicker than a pencil. So,Is all this geometry just another way to justify their cost or is it true science that we are paying in the end?
hiendmmoe

Showing 7 responses by andy2

^^^ I agree.  As I said before that the cable budget should be proportional to the overall system cost.  If you only have a low end system, then Belden cables or even some zip cords should be OK.  But if your system costs north of 20K or so, then you really need some high end cables so to bring out the best of your system.
Twisted wire will help guard against interference. I've never tried these but they look pretty well made and offer to measure the LCR for you at a reasonable price.

https://sites.google.com/view/pine-tree-audio/speaker/speaker-cables/visceral
Cable snake oil does not only belong to the high-end, but also at the low end as well.  Belden is an example of low end snake oil.  
Twisted cables tend to have higher capacitance but lower inductance on average.  It's a trade off so there is no perfect solution.  
^^^ I am glad you were able to get a huge improvement over the Blue Jeans.  I used to have Blue Jeans speaker cables and interconnects but it was easily bested by a set of QED cables that didn't cost that much more than Blue Jeans.
As the amount of current the cables carry increase, the geometry matters less and less.
I think it's the opposite.  That is the higher the current, the more geometry matters.  


If a person does not believe in cable capacitance and inductance will affect the sound, there is not much one can do to change that person mind.
^^^What kind of a system you have that you can't tell the difference?

By the way, most speaker cables freq. response tends to taper off starting around 20KHz, not 30MHz.