Ethernet Cables, do they make a difference?


I stream music via TIDAL and the only cable in my system that is not an "Audiophile" cable is the one going from my Gateway to my PC, it is a CAT6 cable. Question is, do "Audiophile" Ethernet cables make any difference/ improvement in sound quality?

Any and all feedback is most appreciated, especially if you noted improvements in your streaming audio SQ with a High-End Ethernet cable.

Thanks!
grm
grm
When it comes to any shielded cables with metal plugs and shield attached to the ground, you most likely will hear a difference. You are breaking the galvanic isolation. It can sound better initially. Things will sound smoother, less grainy, darker and more detailed. It's bringing in noise to the player.

You can do this test with a Cat6 S/STP or any Cat7 or Cat8 as they are similar and double shielded designs.

I did this for multiple pieces. Buy 3-4 versions of the same cable in the same exact length. The only thing you change is whether the ground is still attached to the shield or not. You can break and remove the metal plugs on the cables. That way you can the same cable with grounds attached on both ends, one end, or no end.

As for hearing differences between similar designs, please always pay attention to the length being used. IME the differences are more exaggerated at short lengths (less than 3m).

Some of these cables work, but don't pass or exceed the spec, like a Belden bonded would. That would be one thing to look at. Hook each cable to a Fluke DTX-1800 and see how it does.

If you have a good cable that measures well on a Fluke, then try multiple versions of it and just vary the length.

You never see that type of control with these reviews. Instead, it's bunch of cables at different lengths.

Provided the cables are well made, such as Belden bonded Cat6 UTP, I don't think they are making things worse/better themselves, but they are rather influencing the behaviour of the PHY (especially in most devices as they aren't using TOTL ethernet packages). So the problem might be with the PHY itself, and the cables are being used to fix/reduce the problem.

I've done similar testing with SPDIF and AES cables. Same wire, same connectors, only vary the length systematically. They all work, but sound slightly different from one another. I tend to prefer longer AES and SPDIF cables with my particular DAC/transport as well.

I think there should be more systematic control in these type of observations.
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gdhal"Basically this means you and I can walk in to home depot and ask the rep for wire to fix a table lamp. Something like this:https://www.walmart.com/ip/Pyle-18-Gauge-High-Quality-Speaker-Zip-Wire-50/20551674?wmlspartner=wlpa&...

And you want me to compare this cheap inferior wire not made to audio purposed for $25K USD to what cable another one from your Home Depot store?
👨‍🚀
gdhal

”I agree with ABX test. Please confirm the parameters of the ABX test conform to https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ABX_test and that you agree to 95% confidence level (25 trials). In other words, please confirm you can audibly detect with 95% confidence that ordinary speaker wire is or is not reversed.”

>>>25 trials? Are you crazy? That’s a lot more trials than even The Amazing Randi demanded. And he never lost a blind test challenge. Why? Because nobody can sit there and pay close attention for 25 trials. Not even for ten trials. Gimme a break. What a ripoff! If the differences are of the subtle variety nobody can pick the correct one many times in a row. That’s the scam. Capish?