DIY cables question


Hello,

I first dipped my toe into hifi during covid and being on a budget, I slowly bought used to build up my system including a decision to DIY my own speaker cables. I bought 20ft of Mogami 3014 wire along with some gold plated banana plug connectors and while having zero soldering experience gave it a go. To date everything works fine but I’m left questioning whether my potentially "shoddy" soldering work is my weakest link and is holding back my setup. I’ve been flip flopping back and forth on just buying some used name brand speaker cables so I can stop the torment. I guess my main question is, when wires work, is it black or white, meaning they either connect or they dont, or can bad soldering limit the max performance of the cables or furthermore my entire setup?

Aside from my DIY speakers cables everything else is name brand, I use AudioQuest Earth RCAs (TT to Pre) and AQ McKenzie XLRs (Pre to Hegel H360), and a Curious USB cable ( Stream Box S2 Ultra to Denafrips Pontus II)

Thanks in advance.



sc0rpi043
@tsushima1 

are you recommending to silver solder bare wire to the terminal post directly? 
Get a spool of 5-9’s fine silver 18 AWG and  some PTFE tubing with an ID large enough to accommodate your wire. Terminate them with hard-drawn 8 AWG fine silver wire pin terminals. Better than any commercial cables no matter the price.  
@facten 

I think this may be my sweet spot between time savings (busy life),cost savings, without sacrificing quality. Do you mind revealing who you ultimately chose to make you cables? Thank you for providing the link too, every here seems so helpful its awesome. 
@andy2 

Would you say the DIYers who offer their services on the forum can compete with the upper echelon of manufacturers? 
@pauly 

interesting, so have you tried bare wire yourself in comparison to connectors? I think my setup is fairly cold and analytical, Im looking for anything to warm it up slightly over neutral. My Hegel with the Quad z3s I have seem wonderful with jazz and strings but cold with pop, rock, reggae and hip hop.