I had connected my Streamer-Dac box via ethernet cable direct from the router using a "generic" cable. Once I changed to an Audioquest shielded Cinammon cable the sound difference was immediately noticeable and it was a good difference. I suspect shielding was the big reason.
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As far as cables are concerned, there is no benefit from “audiophile” cables. You can and should buy brand-name, factory assembled and guaranteed cables such as Leviton or Hubbell. Home made cables where you crimp your plugs on to no-name chinese twisted pair cable of unknown quality are to be avoided like the plague. Cat5E is more than sufficient. Cat5 is sufficient. Cat6 is good but not a requirement for gigabit Ethernet. Don’t waste your money on “audiophile switches”. Avoid big box and dinky computer store switches such as “Assus” and “Toilet Paper Link”. The important thing is to use a good small business grade or enterprise grade switch that is QOS-aware. This means that it will give priority to packets that are tagged with a high DSCP over non-time-critical packets like HTTP and SMTP and POP3. There is a plentiful supply of off-lease enterprise switches (ie: Cisco Catalyst, HP Pro-Curve etc...) available at 5 to 10 cents on the dollar compared to brand new. |
sleepwalker As far as cables are concerned, there is no benefit from “audiophile” cables. You can and should buy brand-name, factory assembled and guaranteed cables such as Leviton or Hubbell. Home made cables where you crimp your plugs on to no-name chinese twisted pair cable of unknown quality are to be avoided like the plague. Cat5E is more than sufficient. Cat5 is sufficient. Cat6 is good but not a requirement for gigabit Ethernet. >>>>Are you talking about cables or wall outlets? Maybe Leviton and Hubble make cables, I guess anything is possible. 😛 |
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