audiophile folklore - cables and claims from manufacturers


The cable debate.

Cables make a difference, sure. 

But SHOULD they?

I have been grappling with this question for the better part of 20 years! 

Fanatical claims from manufacturers, talking about how their cables will improve your system in specific ways, sonically. 

More accurate bass, cleaner midrange sounds, treble resolution... etc. soundstage and imaging, you get the idea.

The fundamental disconnect is - they have never heard YOUR system! 

So then, how do they know what their cables will sound like in your system. Not to mention, astronomical prices on some of these interconnects. The wilder the claims, the higher the cost.

The behavior we should be looking for is passing on the signal, with as little losses as possible. That can be done relatively cheaply, with well made professional interconnects that cost less than 100 dollars in most cases.

If you could build an audio system (all of it) from thrift store finds and cables really did make that much of a difference, then wouldn’t the sound quality scale that way?

It seems many audiophiles I know are in denial. And even worse, some use cables as TONE controls! This is where audiophoolery becomes a religion. Audio dealers promote it, because it impacts their bottom line! 

frank009

@dill 

Whatever floats your boat. 

I'll be on a ship in about a week; a boat cruise.

Let's hope your dingy raft doesn't burst.

"I'll be on a ship in about a week; a boat cruise."

Off the Persian Gulf?

@dill 

I don’t think the dingy raft you’d be in would survive there. 

No, 

Ritz-Carlton. Won't tell you where in the world because I don't want you to go looking for me like waldo. 

@macg19 

You’re right. It is the worst sales pitch.

People who know of Nordost’s eventual "larva-into-butterfly" transformation just suck it up, especially since, once it’s broken in, it is exceedingly good at bringing together dynamic contrast, dynamic range, decent tonal color (not as good as Transparent, Shunyata, Synergistic, though), extremely defined bass, soundstaging, imaging, correct timing and rhythm (no, ALL cables do NOT do timing great, as many musicians could tell you).

But at the beginning (and who knows, maybe they’ve improved on it, although I doubt it), it can be challenging. It’s certainly not for people who have no patience, or the "all-cables-are-snake-oil" crowd, 🙄 I’ll tell you that, so that leaves out a significant number of people.