Does the length of an interconnect degrade the sou


My main system is in my living room which is about thirty feet from my den where I have my home theater system. I want to run a 10 meter length of interconnect between my sacd/dvd/cd player in the den to my main system. Will the length of the cable degrade the sound?
harkey
It really depends on the player but 10 meters is pushing it for most players. If it's digital output you are using, you can probably do it with high quality coax, balanced or optical as long as you have a decent DAC at the other end. If it's analog, the output stage of the player is critical as is the quality of the cables. It can be done.

What player is it? What are the options?
It can, yes, however it depends on the shielding of the cables and how much external EMI and RFI is infiltrating the area near the cables. Other factors also apply.
If you have truly balanced (XLR) in's and out's, 30 feet is nothing!! If you are using unbalanced RCA's you will probably have some signal quality loss.
Fatparrot makes the key point here: balanced interconnects were specifically designed for use in recording situations, where the length of the cable could be significant. For short runs under 2 meters or so, unbalanced interconnects are usually fine, but for a 30-foot run, I second Fatparrot's recommendation to use balanced IC's.
The only real difference in susceptibility to noise pickup and that depends on the RF/EMI environment which is quite noisy in studios. I run 30foot interconnects from preamp to amp and there's no consistent difference between balanced and unbalanced with regard to noise or signal attenuation.

If the source can drive the line and the load for the length, it's fine.
Long length of the cable (like 10 m)will sure degrade the sound. You will here the degradation in dynamic etc.
But if you need it anyway, good idea to use balanced interconnects

Good Luck!