Yter cables direction


I would be grateful if anyone can advise me about direction for conecting Yter cables on speakers. There are no obvius marks or written letters from manufacturer, neither on cables, neither on papers that came with them.
Thank you in advance
alexatpos
Post removed 
@alexatops,
I know you know this but...
To answer your question and stay away from the debate on directionality, try the speaker cables in both directions (could mean multiple variations) and listen for a preferred direction. Whatever you decide upon always use the speaker cables in that manner.
I don't believe Cardas marks their cables with a direction of use for whatever reason?
br3098
Please provide us with your proof or other evidence ...
This an audio hobbyist’s group. No one here owes you proof or evidence of anything. If you like, please feel free to conduct your own tests and report the results.
To restate my point about Yter cables and directionality - apparently, according to what Yter says on their website, they have some special metallurgical technique for eliminating or minimizing the effects of directionality by making the metal conductor more homogeneous than it would otherwise be, you know, by virtue of the wire manufacturing process, which biases the crystal structure in one direction over the other. Maybe they pour molten metal into molds, who knows? In any case, that presumably explains why Yter doesn’t use arrows 🔜 on their cables. Carbon conductors and liquid conductors I.e., Teo Cables might also circumvent directionality by being homogeneous. 

As for Cardas, and I hate to judge before all the facts are in, but it appears they never got the memo on directionality.
As for Cardas, and I hate to judge before all the facts are in, but it appears they never got the memo on directionality.
Or maybe they just clearly understand the difference between science and marketing hype.