First show me a cable cooker with link. And how many cables can it "cook" at the same time? And it will be a simple multiplication really? It's just simple math. Doing a quick search, it seems like some of the "off the shelf" cooker can only 2 or 3 at a time.
Also, breaking in a cable takes more than 24hrs like you said. It takes at least 100hrs. 24hrs barely scratches the surface.
So 100hrs / 3 = 30hrs. So it takes about 30hrs to cook one cables on average given the cooker can do 3 at a time.
If you only have one cable cooker, for a week, you can do (24hr x 7)/30 = about 5.6 cables. Now that counting weekends. Not counting weekend, it would be (24hr x 5)/ 30 = 4. Good luck running a business that can only do 5.6 or 4 cables a week.
And considering most audio cables makers are mom and pop operation, I doubt they have the mean to buy a lot of cable cookers. And to hire some high school dropout to swap out the cables, that costs money too. This is not exactly Apples where you can do mass production.
This is real world we are talking about. Not some guy's wet dreams.
Also, breaking in a cable takes more than 24hrs like you said. It takes at least 100hrs. 24hrs barely scratches the surface.
So 100hrs / 3 = 30hrs. So it takes about 30hrs to cook one cables on average given the cooker can do 3 at a time.
If you only have one cable cooker, for a week, you can do (24hr x 7)/30 = about 5.6 cables. Now that counting weekends. Not counting weekend, it would be (24hr x 5)/ 30 = 4. Good luck running a business that can only do 5.6 or 4 cables a week.
And considering most audio cables makers are mom and pop operation, I doubt they have the mean to buy a lot of cable cookers. And to hire some high school dropout to swap out the cables, that costs money too. This is not exactly Apples where you can do mass production.
This is real world we are talking about. Not some guy's wet dreams.