Ethernet vs 5G Streamer Tech Considerations for Sound Quality


Most audiophile publications say to hard wire ethernet for streamers but it seems to me if you have excellent reliable 5G (> 100 mbps) you avoid all the potential noise added by running ethernet cable and avoid buying special cables, switches, optical rendu etc.  I have read many threads here but not much addressing this. Lots of experience here with digital streaming so wanted open for discussion.

 I am running a Cary DMS-700 via 5G and am extremely pleased with the sound quality. I can’t find wifi max rate on Cary unit but it is MU-MIMO 5Ghz capable and connected to my fios 5G band.
jmbumgarner01

Showing 3 responses by jmbumgarner01

Yes unit has antenna and signal is excellent. So you are saying antenna may pick up extraneous noise around the frequency it is designed for...definitely possible..although I am in a fairly uncongested area. Wonder how noise would compare with cable. Most of what I have read talks about the cables and noise and lots of people selling expensive ethernet cables. @eric squires, if ethernet is inherently balanced why all the $ spent upgrading wires, switches etc ?
The Cary unit has a R2R DAC in it that I am using so no digital cables needed. Thanks for info and understanding the question. Way more than enough capacity so seems like 5G would be preferable.

 I am  looking for technical reasons why ethernet would be better for sound quality than solid 5G. Aforementioned possible ota interference is one possibility. Can’t find much/any technically documented justification or comparisons.
Mitch2 sounds like you had a fair amount work and expense getting main system set. I do have an orbi system as well but my main router signal is solid so I use that, less “devices” touching path I guess.
thyname, of course I can do A/B/A and have, didn’t need that wisdom smh....was just seeing if anyone had any hard data or justification for all the optical rendu and $1000 ethernet cable proponents vs 5G which is indeed a zero additional cost.