What do the arrows mean on my cable?


And how do I tell the difference between a digital cable and an RCA cable, they look the same.

Are the ones with the arrows more likely to be RCA for analog connections?

jumia

Poor @jjss49 pure pollution and trolling. Pot meet kettle. 😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭

whart,

Very interesting post.  I read about the floating shield cable design earlier in an article about a French audio writer named Jean Hiraga.  This dates back to when Monster Cable was oversized zip cord and Interlink was coaxial…before the “balanced bandwidth” design was introduced, which I guess from your post was coincident with Bruce Brisson’s arrival there.  Maybe Bruce read what I read, maybe he also took it further.

I also have heard it said that the open end should go to the component with the “lowest ground potential”, which can be determined by measurement , but your star ground discussion makes more sense…to me.

I'm sure I am not the FIRST one to mention this, but in case, Many manufacturers have discovered that the alignment in the copper atoms lines up in a way that makes them directional, Directional in how they transfer a signal the best, SO they actually mark the cables as to what direction they will operate at optimum levels.