Audio Cables: All the Same?


My patience has worn thin reading numerous postings by individuals who proclaim that anyone who spends more than, say, $30 on a cable is an “audiophool” and that the manufacturers who sell cables priced above that price are snake oil dealers. These people base their claims on two factors: (1) they can’t hear the difference between a cheap cable and an extremely expensive one; and (2) all cables of any quality whatsoever measure the same when tested.


I believe that these individuals have blinders on. Allow me to set forth a useful analogy – eggs Benedict. The recipe for them is simple: toast an English muffin; sauté a couple of slices of Canadian bacon; poach two eggs; and prepare Hollandaise sauce. After those ingredients are ready, put the Canadian bacon on the English muffin, stack the eggs on the bacon, pour Hollandaise sauce over the eggs (and possibly sprinkle a pinch of hot paprika over the sauce), and serve. Voila! Now, take two preparers – one of whom doesn’t give a damn how his eggs Benedict turns and tastes as long as he gets his $17.50/hour pay; and the other a supremely talented chef renowned for his exquisite preparation of egg dishes. I am willing to venture a guess that one of them will taste terrific, perhaps being the memorable highlight of a marvelous breakfast, and the other will be an awful mess, perhaps a composition of barely toasted and soggy English muffin, Canadian bacon so overcooked that the meat is like shoe leather, poached eggs like hockey pucks, and a severely curdled muck of a sauce poured over everything, followed by far too much paprika. That serving will also be memorable, but for a far different reason.


Now, here comes the chemist to test and measure both versions of eggs Benedict. He confirms that, upon his testing of the two dishes, he is able to state unequivocally that they are identical because both contain exactly the same ingredients and provide the same nutritional value. The fact that one serving is nearly inedible and the other is altogether delicious is irrelevant. After all, there is no science-based test for taste.


I propose the same is true for cables – there is no scientific test for what we hear.
Let me end my soliloquy by relating my recent experience with cables. A couple of months ago, I upgraded my digital system by acquiring a new SACD transport and a new DAC. Both components are widely considered to be extremely high end pieces of equipment (and priced stratospherically, too). At the time I did not replace the cables I had been using previously – an Audioquest Cimarron Ethernet cable between my 24 port network switch and my DAC, and Monster Cable M1000 analog interconnects between my DAC and my preamp. Frankly, I was dismayed by what I heard when I began streaming (Qobuz) music through my new DAC. The magic I had heard at its demonstration at AXPONA 2024 was non-existent. Maybe it was a bit better than my old DAC, but certainly not by much. One of the local audio dealers with whom I shared my disappointment suggested I try a really good Ethernet cable, handing me a Shunyata Sigma V2. This Shunyata cable contains two filters (one for EMI/RFI and one for common-mode interference) as well as several differentiators in how it is constructed. I really despise the expression oft-used by reviewers – “like a veil was lifted” – but that is what happened. The magic had returned. However, now I had another problem. Voices seemed to come only from a singer’s mouth and not also from the chest. With instrumentals, a certain fundamental (bass) element was missing. Overall, it was as if the entire frequency spectrum was tilted – lifting the treble and lowering the bass. I went back to this dealer. He recommended I try a pair of DH Labs Air Matrix Cryo analog interconnects between my DAC and my preamp. All I can say is “Wow!” The frequency spectrum had returned to its proper equilibrium.


I have now been using these new cables for a month. Their impacts are not the result of a placebo effect. Moreover, the last thing in the world I had wanted was to spend a couple of thousand dollars more for cables after I had already spent far more than I had planned on the SACD transport and the DAC. However, they had addressed and solved two very real problems. The Shunyata cable filtered out noise coming from the network switch; the DH Labs cable eliminated a frequency distortion inherent with the Monster Cable cable (which evidently had been masked by the predecessor DAC).


Before this experience, I had never believed that cables could be so important an element of an audio system. I always spent between $100 and $200 on them because, on the one hand I did not want to “chintz” and shortchange myself sonically, but on the other hand I was very skeptical that even spending that amount was fully money-for-incremental-value.


Since then, I tried replacing another Audioquest Cimarron Ethernet cable between my Nucleus+ and my network switch with a $500 Ethernet cable of another well-regarded cable manufacturer. I could not detect a shred of sonic difference between them. Thus, it has become clear to me that every cable implementation is unique; sometimes there is a discernable improvement provided by one over the other, and other times there isn’t.


In summary, having a preconceived notion about the value of cables (or lack thereof) disserves oneself. In some cases, but not all, there is a cable out there that will truly improve the sound of one’s audio system. It may be immeasurable, but it is, nevertheless, very real. 
 

jmeyers

Showing 2 responses by alexopth1512

1. There is the same debate running on a local forum for more than 100 pages of posts. Fun fact: the main anti-cable guy, a mod, with more than 1 post every 10 fighting against cables, proved to have expensive cables in his system lol lol lol....

2. I ll make it even worse. 30 years ago, I was young editor in a sound magazine and started discovering the wonderful world of sound... I was just starting realizing how systems details do make a difference and I had also the chance a) to test really good equipment as part of the job b) to make friends with owners of really expensive gear. I met this guy that had invested ridiculous amount of money, starting with the 100k turntable, the big Kronzilla amps... etc... I was invited to listen and I was truly amazed and this setup was of jaw-dropping performance. I was persuaded at the time that cables do matter but I believed that other "goodies" were more or less snake oil. 

I noticed that he had the cables on special stands with spikes and I new that these were expensive, I had seen them on the vendor and I believed this was crap. So I told him, everything ok etc but these stands, come on now... you threw your money out of the window... He replies, why don't we do a blind test then... You imagine what happened... I was shocked... When removed it seems like the concrete stage was collapsing upto a point... I tested again and again because I wouldn't believe it. I asked him if i can borrow to test in my system, a modest 10k system back then compared to his... NO difference in mine... none...

3. In my tests, cables do matter and I have different results in different systems. My audio-gd DAC likes a lot my Odin cable, doesnt like much my furutech cables. My custom design DAC does not like that much Odin (very weird)... It prefers custom Neotech cable with Rhodium connectors. My final stage prefers SPM reference to odin... And yes, more expensive doesn't mean it will work. I had many times got the dissapointment getting something that is so good in papers and I disliked to my guts.

Cheers

@mclinnguy 

Thanks, I played also a  little game. When I see a comment like"yeah suckers with religion in cables etc", I check the person's system and setup. You will find it very interesting.

Another thing that is funny is that most people with such criticism most probably will try to "science" me/us with "measures", physics laws etc. I am PhD Electrical Engineer with research also up to M-theory, an electronics designer and its fun because these people usually are up to college... I prefer not to walk this way, because it is really a long one... 

I remember in 4th year in Polytechnical School, we had a course for "Advanced Electronics", which was using also for example quantum mechanics with relativity. I remember that it counted more than 13 problems for electron movements in conductors, mathematics was truly advanced. I wondered back tehn, what the heck, with all this issues how the hell we say that cables are "just a means for electricity movement". 

Regarding the tests, you are very right:

- Most vendor's rooms just suck. Whenever I have tried to go for a test, I was never satisfied.

- Yes you can test with any music you like, heavy metal has one more thing to add. Many organs (real or synth) play together and multiple IMD is really taken to the edge. If you can build a system that can play heavy metal that sounds non tiring, then this is most probably a hi end system

- Big orchestras (symphonic) are big problem. Big big problem. Haven't found a single system that can play all orchestras well. 

I stop, I can continue for ever :) :)