The Cost of Cables


We all know that there have been countless posts with endless debates about cables on every audio forum available. The reason I start this post is to garner thoughts from others on the cost of cables, not necessarily whether they make a difference or not. I find the prices for cables staggering and I (me personally) do not understand where the cost comes from. Some will say R&D, ok, I can go for that to a point, but can the manufacturing of wire really cost much? (In thinking about this, the discussion could be applied to audio as a whole.)

Obviously cable companies survive because we purchase their products, I include myself. But if we quit paying these large prices, would prices fall dramatically or would they just quit making cables such as we know it and/or close their doors?
brianmgrarcom

Showing 3 responses by mount_rose_music

Okay, my two cents. I used to sell this stuff once upon a time and there were HUGE markups on cartridges and also cables, but especially low end cartridges, like at least 200%. In general as the retail got higher, the margins got smaller. Margins on cables were generally at least a hundred percent. I don't know the current industry and I imagine we won't be hearing concrete examples throughout a line from the mfrs or the dealers. Generally audio resale was about 50-100% markup from wholesale.. with variables based on whether a dealer paid cod, bought qty, etc. Actual TVs had terrible margins, 25% markup was awesome.

An interesting story though, we used to sell at the low end, yamaha, sony and denon. Yamaha and Sony were about a 100% markup, Denon was about 60%. Amazingly enough, at the same retail price points, the Denons always sounded better... hmmmm.

If one looks at this somewhat objectively, many, many hardware dealers have had financial problems, even venerated names like Mark Levinson recently, Wadia, McCormack, etc. But when did you hear a cable dealer going out of business? I am sure there is one, I just can't think of one, same thing with cartridges. So if I add what I know of their profit margins to the fact that they don't seem to have near the percentage of failures of the other dealer types, I'm guessing the margins are still pretty healthy.

Now then, having said all of that, I recently had what seemed like a reasonably honest dealer/manufacturer at my nome. He will soon or has come out with cables. For two years, they have been researching the cables, and he feels that the only way they can conceivably break even or make a profit on these cables is to retail them at 6k a pair for the 2 meter speaker cables. He had to buy the test equipment, figure out the manunfacturing, figure out what the key elements to sound were ( he personally thinks it is the leading and trailing edge of an input square wave) market it, advertise it, etc. He is absolutely convinced that if he cannot get this money in the market, than it will not be worth the developemental costs.

Now to my personal experience. I own a calibration laboratory and a test equipment rental/sale business. I look at the materials, the retail cost of the plugs used, the cost of the wire and shielding, as we often make our own cables and connectors, and I can definitely say that the cost is not in the componenents, absolutely not. Now then, look at the cost of accutron drivers direct from the mfr, and a good scanspeak tweeter from Audio Express. Even at full retail, and purchasing the parts for a crossover, and then having a cabinet maker make a one-off cabinet, I could duplicate a pair of 40 grand speakers for well under six grand. So I wonder how much at wholesale, and in quantity, making your own multiple cabinets, the speaker maker has as materials cost, maybe 1/2? However, I don;t have time nor inclination to make audiophile cables, experiment with different connectors and cables, inductors in parallel, etc, etc. so I experiment with various cables and yes, in a high resolution system, there are huge differences in sound, especially in my experience, in speaker cables. So I pays the money whens I hears da difference, and when I don't, I don't.

On the last part of your post, I bet prices wouldn't go down for existing cables, many cable manufacturers just would come out, as they did during the tech downturn, with "amazing new technology able come within 98% of our very best cable due to incredible advances in metallurgy techniques and connector manufacturer".

Having sold hi-end retail, I can tell you I never pushed the top cables when I sold a system, that could have been death to the whole system. I would try to get them to buy a cable I felt was a relatively good value for the particular system, but even if I thought an expensive cable was the best for a system, I would never ever push it because in the eyes of most of the initial buy consumers, I would then lose any credibility I had. If they came back, after they were familiar with their systems at home, at that point I would recommend loaners, and they got to make their own decisions as to whether different cables were worth it. Any dealer I have dealt with, and when I sold hi-end, the challenge was always to try to find the cheapest cable that would make the speaker or system sound the best, and I personally probably did 65% of down time listening trying different cables in different systems to find the best synergy at the lowest price. I have, however seen some very unscrupulous things go on when my friends do their hometheatres. They get charged as much as 20 bucks a foot for hometheatre cable for stuff that doesn't cost the dealer even 2 bucks a foot, because the consumer looks at the total cost, or they look at what they think is the big part... ie projector, and by the time they are getting to the wire, they are so worn out, that they really don't notice the perfoot price, because it is either totalled, without noting the actual linear footage, or it is a relatively inexpensive line item compared to the projector for instance.

Wow, that was some good therapy :)



I really like this post, kudos to all for not letting this degenerate as so many posts have! I think it is really telling, as jcmorgan notes, that none of the people truly in the know are talking....with all the mfrs and dealers who are members of audiogon who generally chirp in missing, I think that says everything we need to know about justification of cables, there truly is no real, definitive reason except that they charge absolutely what the market will bear.

The crux of the matter for me is, and I suspect the originator of this post, the frustration of hearing differences in cables, wanting the better cables, but knowing deep down we are not getting relative value to the other things in our system, or for that matter, the other things in life. One can buy a brand new Civic for what many of have just in cables in our systems. I bet speakers, turntables, amps all follow a 4 or 5 to 1 rule, in other words that the cost of actual manufacture per piece is one fourth to one fifth the actual retail list, whereas cables are probably around 1/20th or less than the retail sale price.

So obviously a few of us with various sytems should get together and start a cable business, write off our systems as R&D, as well as our music, and start a cable companies. WE would have no additional "r&d" costs as we already have the test beds!!! Our cables then should be much less expensive than our competitors, and we can clean up. Who's with me????

Cheers!!
Chris
Calloway..not sure what you are trying to say? To be quite honest, I don't believe any of these cables companies started with huge R&D money and venture capital. I can only chuckle thinking of an individual starting with an idea going to meet with a Bank of America goup asking them to fund a startup for five thousand dollar speaker wires. If you note my post earlier, I freely admit that I do not have time nor inclination to start a cable company, my second post was for the very most part, tongue in cheek. I agree many people do not have "the guts to follow through with an idea". As a business owner of two separate businesses, the first of which I started with a five thousand dollar signature loan, and worked "part time" at it for four years, I understand the trials and tribulations required to get a business off the ground. I have never though, in my 17 years of owning businesses, done anything but provide superior value to my customers, the original question in this thread was a question of where the costs for these cables comes from, and my point is that it is cetainly not manufacturing cost, and very probably not R&D capital asset cost relative to most other industries. I do not intend to denigrate those entrepreneurs for their entrepreneurship, acually I am somewhat envious of what I see, and this is only my opinion, of their sheer elan in their markup over their manufacturing cost.

Cheers!
Chris