Chinese fake cables How fake, how good?


I have noted a number of warnings about cheap Chinese fake cables on this site but curiosity led me to the Aliexpress site where I found a number of presumably fake big name cables from predominantly Cardas, Nordost and Siltech at about 15% of the USA or Australian price. I found Cardas Clear Light interconnects at about US$100 and decided what the heck let's give them a try at that price. Before buying I asked the seller the daft question as to whether they were genuine and got the reply that they were an OEM and constructed the interconnects from genuine Cardas cables and connectors. They arrived in a plastic bag rather than the Cardas box , not a great start but the cables looked real, and when connected, much to my surprise, they sounded really good. After 100hours or so burn in they sounded great and better than the Nordost Quatre Fils I had been using. I then took them to an Australian hi end dealer who sold real Cardas and asked rather ingenuously whether my cables were the real deal. The dealer would not commit but agreed to compare them to the real thing on a set up costing at a guess around A$100,00. Neither I nor the sales person could tell any difference so he then tried them against the Cardas Clear. Then there was some difference, not extreme but subtle, and certainly IMO not worth the price difference even if you bought the genuine Cardas Clear Light. So are these cables really fake and even if they are given my experience they are well worth a try. Maybe I'll try Nordost Odin or Siltech 770i next.
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Showing 1 response by larryi

Some fakes are pretty impressive, as far as getting the looks right. Some even use authentic parts to get the right look.  Anyone can buy Audio Note RCA jacks and wire to make their own Audio Note cables.  But, I've seen the authentic jacks put onto fake Audio Note wire to make quite bad sounding knock-offs.  These fakes are pretty common on the used market.

As to some of the suggestions that the genuine wire is itself a rip off if you add up the cost of the parts, that is a trickier analysis.  Can someone really make their own Nordost Odin cable--are all the constituent parts available and is there a practical way to actually assemble the parts?  I've seen their cables and they are made of multiple strands of wire that are individually wrapped with some kind of fiber, which is itself covered by another insulator.  It is meaningless to add up the amount of silver, amount of teflon, etc. to derive a "cost" of the material.  I am sure Nordost has a crazy high margin on these products, but, if you like the performance of the cable, you have to pay the price to get it, or make it yourself, or find a cheaper alternative.