To the original poster’s question, I say "yes". I have never owned speaker cable that costs $5000, but have heard them in demos and they certainly didn’t seem to detract from the overall experience.
Over 10 years ago I replaced a very long run of lamp cord with $5.00 a foot solid core copper wire in a generally poor system and I was hard pressed to immediately hear any difference. After a long break in period the sound of the wire changed, but not necessarily for the better, just better exposing fatal flaws in my amp and speakers, providing a clearer window on generally crappy sound. Needless to say, that system is long gone.
I very recently replaced decent $1 per foot and $2 per foot multistranded copper cables in two different systems with some solid core copper cables with more exotic metallurgy and construction that cost more than 10x the cables they replaced. One system is a solid home theater/two channel digital and analog set up in a purpose built media room with 21’ cable runs. The other is a computer based office system for near field listening that cost less than $1K. In both cases, the difference was shocking, especially in the office system in that I was not prepared for it to be capable of sounding that good. Tone, timing, lack of sibilants, and spatial information are all improved. In both cases, the cables are completely out of view, so the only satisfaction of owning them is what I hear coming out of my speakers. But what I hear coming out of the speakers in both systems is a problem now because I want to listen to music all the time, LOL.
Based on admittedly limited past personal experience I put the hierarchy of impact of cables as power cords first, then interconnects, and finally speaker cables. My recent experience challenges my previous assumptions about this. Perhaps because I had the upstream cabling sorted out, the speaker cables showed more effect than I had noticed in the past.
My recent experience with power, interconnects and speaker cables tells me metallurgy makes a big difference and that grain and surface structure are both important, perhaps as or more important than the metal purity. I will say silver wires generally sound completely different than the copper wires I have heard. In my current systems, I prefer Silver digital cables and copper analog cables, YMMV.
If this all sounds crazy or doesn’t match your experience, then that is great - you will save money and can use the cables you got in the box with your gear or at the hardware store and be perfectly happy. I am just reporting some of my own experiences here, not itching for a fight.
kn
Over 10 years ago I replaced a very long run of lamp cord with $5.00 a foot solid core copper wire in a generally poor system and I was hard pressed to immediately hear any difference. After a long break in period the sound of the wire changed, but not necessarily for the better, just better exposing fatal flaws in my amp and speakers, providing a clearer window on generally crappy sound. Needless to say, that system is long gone.
I very recently replaced decent $1 per foot and $2 per foot multistranded copper cables in two different systems with some solid core copper cables with more exotic metallurgy and construction that cost more than 10x the cables they replaced. One system is a solid home theater/two channel digital and analog set up in a purpose built media room with 21’ cable runs. The other is a computer based office system for near field listening that cost less than $1K. In both cases, the difference was shocking, especially in the office system in that I was not prepared for it to be capable of sounding that good. Tone, timing, lack of sibilants, and spatial information are all improved. In both cases, the cables are completely out of view, so the only satisfaction of owning them is what I hear coming out of my speakers. But what I hear coming out of the speakers in both systems is a problem now because I want to listen to music all the time, LOL.
Based on admittedly limited past personal experience I put the hierarchy of impact of cables as power cords first, then interconnects, and finally speaker cables. My recent experience challenges my previous assumptions about this. Perhaps because I had the upstream cabling sorted out, the speaker cables showed more effect than I had noticed in the past.
My recent experience with power, interconnects and speaker cables tells me metallurgy makes a big difference and that grain and surface structure are both important, perhaps as or more important than the metal purity. I will say silver wires generally sound completely different than the copper wires I have heard. In my current systems, I prefer Silver digital cables and copper analog cables, YMMV.
If this all sounds crazy or doesn’t match your experience, then that is great - you will save money and can use the cables you got in the box with your gear or at the hardware store and be perfectly happy. I am just reporting some of my own experiences here, not itching for a fight.
kn