I have a two story house, with my router in my office, next to my dedicated music room. The house is wired with CAT 5e ethernet cable. My MSB Discrete DAC and music server are connected to the network. For the music to get to my DAC, it must go down to the modem and main switch for the house and then back up again to my DAC . . . I figure at least 200 feet of CAT 5e. I had the brilliant thought that if I ran a Supra CAT 8 directly from my router to the DAC (about 40 ft.), it would not only be a much higher quality cable than the generic CAT 5e, but since it would be a run of about 40 ft directly from the router versus 200 ft of CAT 5e and through a switch, it would be a new day of listening pleasure. Imagine the new freedom from EMR and other sources of noise! Nope. I couldn't hear any difference at all. Maybe my hearing is not as good as it once was, but no improvement in soundstage, bass, treble, imaging, etc. Now maybe the Supra needs to be run for a period of time before magic starts, but it still makes zero sense to me that an ethernet cable changes with "break-in." The other factor at play is that I have a GigaFoil v4 box between the wall and the DAC. Maybe that is cleaning things up so that the Supra and the short straight run to the DAC have less effect? I will see after 100 hours of running some packets through it if anything changes, but right now my lofty expectations have not borne fruit.
Supra Cat 8 Ethernet cable
HI All
I recently purchased a Supra Cat 8 ethernet cable to replace the stock cable to my bluesound node 2i after hearing rave reviews of the Supras. However, the Supra sounded rather bright and clinical in my system. Plus side it has a lot of details, sounds very clear and bass prodution was pretty good but just sounded very forward and bright over my stock ethernet cable. Am using Klipsch 6000 f speakers, an XTZ power amp and a Freya + preamp.
I have not run in the Supra fully yet, about 7 hours. Will it get better over time? Has anyone who has used Supra to your node 2i felt the same. Or do you have a different opinion? Appreciate your views.
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@calvinandhobbes Tks for sharing. @marco1 Yes I feel the same. Gonna try Blue Jeans cat 6 next. And if it doesnt work, go back to stock which was quite good for starters. |
@ram18 I use the Supra Cat 8 cable with a Pro-ject streamer. It replaced a AmazonBasics Cat 6 cable and the improvement was immediately apparent to me. |
@audphile1 Thanks for the tip. Will check it out. Room acoustics are indeed critical. |
Research room acoustics. There are good videos on YouTube by New Record Day. |
@audphile1 Yes behind the listening couch. |
@audphile1 Yes sorry I was referring to my router. I have 3 big absorption panels on the wall opp my system. Initially, I had a carpet on the floor but the sound became too deadened. So I removed it. The sound becomes more alive without the carpet. |
@audphile1 Thank you for your detailed explanation. Yes Class D amps are traditionally hot sounding. The XTZ however leans to a neutral delivery. Honestly its a great steal for the price. As for my Klipschs refrence premiere speakers they are a tad bit bright not as bright as the ones of the past that Klipschs are known for. I have a tube Schiit Freya + preamp which tones down the brightness and helps give a smoother feel. So far with my stock 5e ethernet cable, the combo somehow sounds warmer.
But you are right, maybe the Supras are revealing the true effects of the system compared to my stock ethernet cable. Sorry for a noob question. How does one ground a router. Mine does not come with screws and it is just placed on my console.
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@ram18 ok. If the router/switch has a ground screw, try grounding it. It may or may not be an audible improvement but definitely worth a shot and will cost you far less than buying and trying more cables. Free advice, take it for what it’s worth. Like I said earlier, don’t get hung up on cables at this level. Especially Ethernet. If you like your klipsch speakers and want to keep them, a good solid state Class A/B or even a tube amp may be your ticket. There are many choices out there especially on a used market that will not break the bank. Anyway…just my thoughts. |
@audphile1 My supra ethernet is connected from my bluesound node 2i to a router switch which also has my TV lan and internet connections. The internet cable comes from the wall to the router. The router power socket is connected to a power strip and the power strip to my wall socket. I dont have Roon or DSP. I stream via my bluesound. I stream from Tidal via my bluesound app on my phone. |
@ram18 can you describe your set up feeding the streamer? Router, access points, switches etc. Also, do you use Roon, your streaming service(s), how do you stream…Spotify or Tidal connect, Bluetooth, airplay or bluesound app and whether or not you have any DSP or upsampling enabled anywhere in the chain (Roon or Bluesound). |
I have been running in my Supra 8 ethernet cable by playing my node2i overnight (with my amps off) for the past few days. Having done this, I did an A/B testing with my stock node 2i cat 5e ethernet cables. The Supra was much more detailed with better bass tightness and thump. But it was still much edgy and brighter compared to the stock cable. Some songs sounded harsh. The stock ethernet cable while not as detailed or with defined bass production like the Supra, was more musical, warm and involving to listen to. Non fatiguing at all. I tend to immerse with the music laid back with the stock ethernet cable, rather than being on the edge of my seat with the Supra, absorbing the details along with the brightness. I have been reading about the Supras. Some say its better at the back end as in wall socket to router rather than front end such as router to streamer. Has that worked for anyone? My other step in experimentation is to get a Blue Jeans cat 5e or 6 ethernet cable . If the Blue Jeans (BJC) doesnt work then I will stop the ethernet experimentation and just rely on my stock ethernet cable. Anyone has experiences with the BJC? Appreciate your thoughts.
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I relocated my modem and replaced the Amazon Cat ? cable with Supra Cat 8 with Telegarner ends along with a purchase of a switch . I never much cared for streaming my music for any serious listening including listening to internet radio, ripped CDs and loaded music files sound quality were far superior to streaming. AudioSensibility had a sale on this past spring on their Supra Lan cable and internet switch. They Cryo treat their wire and connectors at no extra expensive. Its incredible to me the transformation of sound from what I had to what I’m listening to now and it’s easy to A-B between the original Lan cable and the new for anyone who denies or insist there would be any difference’s , lol how wrong they are . |
I compared a regular Cat 5E ethernet cable, a Blue Jeans Cat 6A, and Certicables Cat 8 cables, all 3 meters. The Cat 5E was the stock cheap cable provided by the cable company, the BJ 6A cost something like $10 and the C 8 was about $50 on either Amazon or eBay. I thought there was a slight improvement with each step up in price, mostly what I would call "vividness" or immediacy. The improvements weren't such that I am seeking out a $500 cable. I stream Qobuz files through a Roon player onto my network and use a Bricasti M1SE DAC with a network player. The analog signal is sent to a Benchmark HPA4 headphone amp and I use Kennerton Rognir Planar Magnetic headphones. |
I choose Supra Cat8 for its build quality, at 50 bucks per meter, I thought it was a reasonable upgrade. At the time I was using a Node2i with a ARC dac, can’t say for certain if there was definitive improvement over the stock Cat5, at best there was a better sense of clarity? I did recently play with Monoprice Cat8 from Amazon Prime, which is a really well made cable (heavier gauge than Supra). I didn’t detect a difference between the Supra and Monoprice. admittedly, I suck at picking out micro nuances so ymmv.
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No, I don't use a streamer, just a computer. My ear is sensitive to all kinds of digital wrongs so I would've heard it. I don't quite remember about breaking it in, it was alright from the beginning and I bought it new. In my case, signal goes from computer to a not too bad Burson Dac via Wywires Silver USB cable. Wywires Silver power cord on the Dac. Grado RS1 headphones.
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@ram18 ex-Supra Cat8 user here too; no brightness issues; shielded Cat6a from router to ethernet to fibre optic/fibre optic to ethernet converters. - Supra Cat8 to Node. Agree with others, let it play on loop for a good number of hours. |
@audioman58 Good suggestion. Will leave streamer running. Thanks |
+1, @audphile1 …Let the Supra break-in for 100 hours before you make any more changes! |
@ram18 yes I used Supra CAT8 to connect the EERO access point and Lumin U1 Mini. |
@akg_ca Thanks for the detailed brief! |
@audphile1 Sound advice indeed! Am quite happy with my system but as the audiophile itch goes, looking for incremental changes, where possible;) |
There is a general theme being oft-repeated on the other audio forums I subscribe to. ( NOTE: I am not a network engineer professional, just another simple audio Joe…”.) These are examples quoted directly from CAM that summarizes the two general important points. IN BRIEF:
(2) “ … There are new online reviews coming up that are hands-on bakeoffs that weed the grain from the chaff….what matters is one thing: SHIELDING.
IN DETAIL “RE: For those of you that buy boutique Ethernet cables” “ … Then you should understand there is a big difference between experts and users... Personally I take the experts word for it. When the expert says not only can you hear it but you can see it on an AP... I take his word for it lol... Sheesh you don’t even have to pay much for decent cables...Yes some cables are ridiculously priced but not all of them are…”
REVIEW:What causes audible differences in network cables
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@ram18 don’t get sucked into the cables game at this level. |
Ethernet cabling has an effect on the performance of your system. Leakage currents and the radiation of the cable are the problems. When the shield is connected at both sides (in theory a good thing, when the shield is tied to the chassis and not the signal ground) like CAT 8 there is a possibility that leakage currents will start to flow between your components. The cure would be CAT 5/6, some kind of galvanic isolation (medical network isolator/transformer), or using a floating shield. Floating shields have less shielding effectiveness, but have the advantage of not transporting current between components. The radiation can be controlled by putting ferrite clamps on the both endpoints of the cable. Or putting extra layers of (floating) shield around the cable covered in layers of heatshrink/teflon tape between them. (dual/triple/quad shielding). Quick and dirty fix. |
@audphile1 Thanks for sharing. At least there is a ray of hope for me. Good to hear it worked well in your system. Will run it in since I already bought it. |
@audioman58 Wow thats a long time for burn in. Am hoping for some smoothening with my Supras now with some burn in as I look for alternatives. |
@lordmelton Thanks for the options. As I am experimenting, dont wish to invest too much as yet. Heard about the audioquest as well which apparently is good. But it is expensive where I am located. Thinking of trying out some Blue Jeans ethernet cables perhaps. Seems cost effective and apparently some good feedback so far. |
@mike_in_nc I find it difficult to assign a reason for sound signature with ethernet cables as well. In any case, can't say I've heard one. I can understand the cat 8 being inferior as it transfer noise via ground plane. On the other hand, cable itself more impervious to rfi, still can get in connectors.
In my ethernet cable experiments only heard differences in noise floor, I agree Supra only so, so. Settled on Audioquest Vodka, haven't bothered since.
By the way, many of us concerned with galvanic isolation of ethernet, a la fiber conversion or filters of various types. |
@mike_in_nc as far as ethernet cables go I agree. Just get AQ Forest and call it a day. |
Some thoughts and questions: By what mechanism -- other than noise transfer -- could an Ethernet cable carrying packets make the eventual analog sound be warmer or brighter? Is this measurable? Detectable in a blind test? Persistent over time? Would "a tad warmer" suit every recording? If not, wouldn’t it be more efficient to just buy a good equalizer that could be adjusted per recording? How musically significant are differences among Ethernet cables, compared to other things one might do to improve sound with $275 or $600, like buy a bass trap or two, or acquire some very good Scotch, or spend a day finding the best position for one's speakers and the listening chair and then take the SO out for dinner? Why should defeating the galvanic isolation of Cat 7 Ethernet be a good thing?
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@mike_in_nc Thanks for the valuable advise. You make a lot of sense. Now I realise why my system sounds bright. Its quite a reality check cause I was reading most reviews and these Supra Cat 8 cables were very well reviewed by most. But I didnt not come across the sheilding issue. Never knew ethernet cables could make such an impact on sound. I was intially skeptical that I would experience any change from upgraded ethernet cables but was surprised how my system became rather bright. The ethernet cables do make a difference! In my case, for the worse. Thankfully I didnt spend too much. Guess I learnt something. Will look out for a good cat 6 or 7 cable then. Just bought a Gotham power chord for my node 2i. Hope that cheers me up! Thank you for your very informative sharing. |
The main difference is that Cat 8, which is totally unnecessary for home audio, has a shield and metal connectors and potentially will transfer noise through its shielding. Cat 6 and 7 (MORE than enough) do not have that "feature" and will isolate one unit from another. Many think that a little noise transferred over the grounding scheme can cause brightness, harshness, forwardness. It strikes me as a little odd that audiophiles rave about galvanic isolation for USB, where it costs a lot more, and then pay more for an Ethernet cable that defeats galvanic isolation. it’s almost like they think that whatever costs more must be better. I’m glad for you that at least you didn’t pay hundreds or thousands for it! I suggest using a Cat 6 or 7 cable and not believing half of what you read on the Internet. Most of the review sites are just propagating nonsense, IMO. What qualifications do the reviewers really have? How good are their systems? Rooms? Ears? Who is holding them responsible? Why would they have less expectation bias (e.g.) than any other human being? One old guy’s opinion.
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