Do cables Matter? Yes. You couldn’t hear your speakers without them! But do expensive cables make your system sound better? Not necessarily

My background is in sound engineering, I have a degree in music recording tech, and I work full time at a pro sound retail store as a repair tech and salesman. I also had this article fact checked by my coworker and fellow repair tech before posting it here.

Cables to matter to the degree that using the right cable for the right application matters. Using the right gauge wire for the amount of power you’re pushing matters, knowing where to use shielded cable vs unshielded cable matters. Knowing where to use balanced vs unbalanced cable matters.

Balanced cable: have 3 terminals. (+) (-) and (ground). A balanced cable from a balanced source carries two out of phase copies of the same signal, and blends them together at the destination. This eliminates hum that is picked up along the length of the cable. Balanced cables include XLR and TRS. Balanced cables are best when running long lengths of cable, because the longer the cable the more EM interference will be picked up along the length of the cable. For short cable runs of a few feet, it won’t make a noticeable difference.

Unbalanced cables have (+) and (-) terminals. Examples of unbalanced cables include most speaker cables, RCA cables, and instrument cables.

Shielded cables have a (+) and (-) terminal where the (-) terminal is a wire shield that is wrapped or woven around the (+) wire. This helps to reduce EM interference. Most small signal carrying cables will be shielded, like RCA cables and instrument cables. Balanced cables are also shielded with the shield connected to ground.

Now, most speaker cables are going to be both unbalanced and unshielded. They have just a positive and negative terminal. Speaker cables need to be heavy gauge wire, this is because speaker cables are typically carrying relatively high amounts of power, so thicker wire=less resistance=more power handling. Speaker cables don’t typically need to be balanced or shielded, this is because the additional EM interference picked up along the length of the cable will be negligible compared to the signal being carried by the cable, and therefore not audible.

So, using the correct gauge of wire is really important for speaker cables because the more power you put though a cable, the more heat you generate as a byproduct. If the cable is too small to handle the load, it will melt the casing, potentially causing a short and damage to your equipment or worst case a fire. So that’s why you don’t use a guitar cable to connect your head to your cab even though they both have 1/4 ends. That’s why you use speaker cable for speakers. That’s it.

What to look for? What actually matters when choosing a cable? There are definitely differences in quality of cables, there are some things that will make a small improvement in fidelity in theory, and higher quality cables will also last longer than cheap cables. There may be a slight difference in noise floor when using a good shielded cable vs cheap shielded cable, and oxygen free copper will have slightly less resistance than standard copper which will improve fidelity. I generally like Mogami/Canere cable because they use good quality wire and good quality casing. Overall, you will pay slightly more for a high quality cable that will last longer and may have a slightly lower noise floor. Anyone selling cables for hundreds of dollars making wild claims about clarity and sound stage is selling you snake oil. Period. Looking at you, audioquest and Cardas. The difference in audio fidelity will likely not be audible in most home audio setups. I wanted to make this post because I see this question pop up here DAILY and I’m getting tired of it. Less beating a dead horse and more focal grande utopia’s please.

  • AmericanAssKicker@alien.topB
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    11 months ago

    I can tell you as an electrical engineer with a focus in power (this is what I studied and did for a living), there’s absolutely zero scientific reason that non-defective, inexpensive cables/wires would sound different than some more expensive cables/wires in this setup. Zero.

    My bet is that they altered a setting, or maybe they “fixed” a connection or something else that a company that makes snake oil products would do.

    Here’s my funny story: Prior to becoming an electrical engineer, I sold high-end home and car audio (McIntosh, B&O, ML, etc.) and I sold thousand dollar cables and wires to “match” these systems; I bought the snake oil and it was very profitable. Fast forward and years later while in college I chose power (transmission lines, signals, etc) as my focus and one of my professors is a HUGE audiophile - guy lives for Russian & Soviet-era tubes, kinda audiophile. He and I geek out on testing audio cables and wires for years - not so much wires since that’s pretty black/white but cables at least have the potential to accept interference, and then more importantly, pass that interference on to be amplified.

    I run Home Depot extension cords for speaker wire and my cables are around the $50/6-feet range. I do have some XLRs running with a Carver set up but after running multiple tests with my ears and then finally with an o’scope, there was zero difference found.

    Point is, beware of the snake oil salesman and their products. Unless you have a truly unique situation, you shouldn’t ever have to pay much for perfect cables/wires.