Cable Quality Control and Objective Reviewers


Cable quality control is rarely discussed among audiophiles I know in person.

They would much rather chat about the claims made by manufacturers that include specific, system-level improvements that cannot be validated. 

I’m all for high quality cables with proper terminations for long-term reliability, and proper gauge wires, and connections that fit snugly enough on ports. 

I was browsing the web yesterday and found this: Kimber RCA Cable vs Amazon Basics (Video) | Audio Science Review (ASR) Forum

Now, in all fairness, the Kimber cable is a luxury item first, and an audiophile item second.

I really like a brand called "world’s best cables" on amazon. Their cables are very high quality and the their quality control is top notch.

How do I know this?

Well I’ve used their cables for many years; and have spliced some of them open just out of curiosity to see what’s inside, because I intentionally bought extras just for that purpose.

I really hate cost cutting in audio. Especially when it happens to be from a vendor that should do better. 

Inside the amazon basics RCA cable, we find mostly heavy-duty tubing and very little copper. 

The worst cable I’ve ever seen was the Hosa HRR-005X2 5-Feet Dual REAN RCA Pro Stereo Interconnect Cable.

Cut it open, and inside found what looked like a cotton ball stretched apart, and the thinnest, cheapest, ugliest copper I had ever seen in my life. Thinner than hair on people who have very thin hair. Weak, brittle copper that was soft and rough to the touch as the same time. Disgusting. 

Did it make a difference in my system? Yes it did. 

And not in a good way. the midrange became "glassy" and the treble took on a hard edge. The bass frequencies sounded more rounded and less tight, and the soundstage shrunk. I hated them... 

Now before anyone accuses me of talking nonsense, we need to acknowledge that cables are physical devices and don’t pass sound through a quantum vacuum. Physics still applies, whether objective reviewers like it or not. It’s not an opinion, it’s a fact.

Interconnects measured under resistive loads will of course not be impacted in the same way as how they are when plugged in to real audio electronics. Numerous electrical factors are missing from the equation with "test bench only" reviews.

It’s like saying a piece of chocolate tastes good - in isolation (on its own) 

But melted in to a cake you’re baking - well that’s a different equation. The flavor of the cake will change; the balance and texture may change too... You get the idea.

The cable being so thin, the dielectric being so lousy, and the shielding being so poor means it could not only pick up noise, but acted as a suboptimal conductor; a bad bridge between two points -input and output. And I’d wager to say the most important connection, even before your source is between your preamplifier and power amplifier. Keep the resistance and cable length as short as possible, and choose truly high quality interconnects.

Some may dismiss this as folklore, yet videos like this paint a broad brush and force a specific kind of cognitive dissonance on the audience: 

$4000 Audio Cable vs $7!!!

First of all, it’s heading is completely illogical. 

What it sounds like: 400 dollar steak vs. 7 dollar prime rib sub from a random shop in a ghetto.

The naysayers, non audiophiles, and people who genuinely hate us for our hobby will laugh and write drivel in the comment section on the video as they always do, talking about how we’re such fools.

Yet we have a right to pay for quality control and a higher bill of materials is a often a better indicator that a manufacturer "did their homework" and has higher quality control standards. 

This has been my experience with interconnects.

frank009

Cable quality control is rarely discussed among audiophiles I know in person.

They would much rather chat about the claims made by manufacturers that include specific, system-level improvements that cannot be validated. 

Translation: Most audiophiles I know in person are idiots and I’m telling strangers this in a forum.

So....

The OP opens by criticizing audiophiles who accept manufacturer claims that "cannot be validated." Then he describes a single unblinded cable swap that produced glassy midrange, hard treble edges, and a shrunk soundstage. That's the same methodology  just criticized — same basic structure, opposite conclusion.

The physics argument doesn't rescue this. Identifying real defects — thin conductors, poor shielding — establishes only that some degradation is possible in principle. It doesn't bridge to the specific perceptual report. The gap between "this cable has high resistance" and "the soundstage shrunk" isn't closed by invoking physics.

There's also an irony: he rejects bench measurements as inadequate for real-world conditions, but trusts his own splice inspections as quality evidence. Both are physical assessments removed from system-level listening. He accepts one and dismisses the other.

None of this means cheap cables can't cause problems — they can. A genuinely defective cable is real. The trouble is that an unblinded listening impression, however vivid, doesn't tell you whether you're hearing conductor resistance or your own expectations.

@hilde45 

I wouldn’t call them idiots - but they lack the ability to reason in a structured manner. They have that "groupthink" hat on all the time. 

Oh man, it was tough to read that. You just postulate without any observable direction. Monkey branching your sentences together... gosh.

I said very clearly that low quality interconnects (as I mentioned) did not sound good.

I spliced them open AFTERWARDS not before, and not during the listening session while they were plugged in. 

As someone who has been a VP of manufacturing/quality control, it is in my best interest to have the liberty of seeing what I’m paying for with interconnects.

The following was from an AI agent - I asked it a bunch of specific questions about why those specific cables made that negative change - this is the first point it made (out 1 of 5): 

1) Ground integrity problems (very likely)

Cheap RCA cables often have:

  • thin, high-resistance ground return
  • loose shield braid contact
  • inconsistent plug barrel connection

If the ground is slightly compromised, you don’t just get hum — you can get:

  • elevated high-frequency hash
  • unstable reference voltage between components
  • “etched,” glassy treble

And this is precisely what I experienced with those lousy cables I mentioned earlier. In addition, the cables could only be so snug as their connectors allowed.