Dang it… cables do matter (at least in my system)


I really didn’t want to write this post.

Like many of you, I am not a cable guy. I would much rather believe that a well-made, sensibly priced cable gets you 99% of the way there and that anything beyond that is mostly jewelry for audiophiles. In fact, that belief is exactly why I started this experiment in the first place.

I recently picked up a higher-end phono cable (Nordost Heimdall 2) to compare against a Blue Jeans Cable I already owned and respected. My intention—honestly—was to scratch the curiosity itch, confirm that the cheaper cable sounded just as good in my system, and then send the expensive one back with my wallet intact and my worldview reinforced.

That… did not happen.

In my system, the pricier cable consistently sounded better. Not “night and day,” not “jaw on the floor,” but unmistakably better: wider and more coherent soundstage, stronger and more articulate bass, better placement of instruments, more air around them, and a more resolved top end that wasn’t brighter or etched. Just clearer. More sorted. More believable.

Still, I was fully prepared to chalk some of that up to expectation bias. After all, I knew which cable was which, and $1,200 has a way of whispering sweet nothings into your ears.

So tonight, during a dinner party, I did something unplanned. I had four people listen—my brother (a dyed-in-the-wool non-audiophile), my daughter (a budding audiophile), my sister-in-law (a musician), and my wife. I didn’t tell them which cable was which, only that they were two different phono cables at very different price points and that I was trying to decide between them.

All four, independently and without hesitation, preferred the same cable. Not subtly. Not with hedging. My brother—who could not care less about hi-fi and would happily listen through a Bluetooth speaker—said there was “no question” which one he liked and that he wouldn’t use the other if given the choice.

Cue my quiet sigh.

So yes, to my chagrin and to the detriment of my wallet, the more expensive cable outperformed the cheaper one in my system. I wish the Blue Jeans had won. I truly do. This would have been a much cheaper and more philosophically satisfying outcome.

I’m not claiming cables transform systems, nor that everyone needs to run out and spend real money on them. I’m also not suggesting this will translate universally. But in this case—same system, same music, multiple listeners—the difference was real enough that even the skeptics in the room heard it.

I remain annoyed.
But apparently… cables do matter. Somewhat.

Dang it

brighamdoc

@brighamdoc you should definitely try better cables than BJs from phono into integrated. Pass components react well to better cables. You should try better power cords at some point as well. It’s the sum of all parts. Life is too short to use crappy cables. Lol

@brighamdoc 

Still, I was fully prepared to chalk some of that up to expectation bias.

I have come to a point where I believe my ears.  I hear what I hear.

Others can tell me it is the placebo effect, or expectation bias, or that without a blind A/B test I am not able to hear what I hear -- or that because I can't hear above 15 kHz, that that somehow invalidates the frequencies that I do hear, etc.

When I demo a cable, or a box, or a song / re-master, etc, I clear my mind of all of the noise from the "specs are everything" crowd, and "all properly built cables sound the same" crowd.

Your story was entertaining, and you probably all had some fun with the activity.

But prior to that A/B testing with your family, you knew what you heard.  It was unmistakable.  Let cable deniers tell you differently, and let their propaganda go in one ear and out the other.

Cables matter.  Believe your ears, no matter what anyone tells you.

By the way, approximately 15 years ago, my local high-end store loaned me a box of interconnects, from 6 or 7 different manufacturers.  At the time, I was using interconnects from Quicksilver Audio.

I spent half the day demoing all of the loaned interconnects.  A few sounded so close to each other, I doubt that I would be able to tell them apart.  One or two sounded worse than my Quicksilver Audio cables.

But one set of cables stood out.  They were unmistakably better.  They were Audioquest Sky interconnects.  I needed no blind testing, or anyone else to confirm what I heard.

Trust your ears.

seymour-krelborn

Your ears did not deceive. The Audioquest Sky still hold up well in 2026.

 

Happy Listening!

brighamdoc

Welcome! to the club. Aren't you glad that you took a leap of faith? Now, enjoy the music!

 

Happy Listening!

Confession of a cableholic anonymous:  All of my cables are pretty expensive, but recently a friend brought me a Van den Hul Clearwater speaker cables, which are 1/100 the price of my current cables. And I was shocked! Not in all aspects, but overall they performed better than my expensive cables. So it's also system matching, I guess. Sometimes it's difficult, but we should really trust our ears...