Why high-end cable manufacturers don't post measurements?


I'd like to get your take on why high-end manufacturers don't post measurements? would you like to see how a cable measure before ....does it matter to you?
128x128scar972
And here is the problem. Why is it that you cannot have a civil convo, instead of attacking and degrading someone who seems to have different ideas than you. That’s what seems to be the shame. B4, I did not not hear any mention of testing involving listening, or tuning based on the listening results. Are you trying to say that cable manufacturers do not do this, or maybe your field of expertise is not in the audio cable business so you are not familiar with is part of the process. The engineering done at a cable manufacturer isn’t done to just meet some numbers they’re trying to reach and your post seems to indicate, but instead it designed to meet some goals they set at the start of the design process in terms of what they are trying to improve upon, meaning the sound. That’s the end goal, or at least I would hope should be with a cable. The engineering is done to meet those goals. They may set a measurement they are trying to hit to achieve that goal, but once they do, it will still go to the listening phase to see if they did achieve the desired results. As anyone who has dealt with a very high performance race engine knows ( a hobby for me), the measurements can help greatly, but sometimes it’s our understanding of what they mean that is at issue. Sometimes you will find that the numbers don’t get the expected results, and when in the end something different works, we have to then come up with the logic that explains why. There is an explanation, and usually it’s because there are so many variables that we find a new variable affected things in a way we did not realize it would. If you refuse to even consider variables past a preset list, you may forever be stuck at the same point. Not exactly on the same point now, but still relevant to many who post about such things. 
speedbump6, it sounds to me like you understand the difference between the numbers and test performance performance and the search is to figure out what is not being taken into account in the calculations. From my work on cable design I have found there are some factors (if you think of it as a factor in an equation system) which influence the perceived performance, but are not commonly taught in engineering classes. 

In the case of audio, not ever one likes the same thing. So, sell customers what they want or don't bother with that particular customer at all. I often pass on particular customers completely, but I may ask them if they have experienced I particular design they might like even when it is not my design. I try to be helpful when I can, but only if I think the potential customer may appreciate it.

Racing was a hobby of mine, to old for it now.
@audio-union
Very interesting comments.  It would absolutely be a challenge, perhaps impossible, to analyze blind testing data to develop a scale to predict system performance.  However, I don't think that's what double blind testing is really about.  It is about whether you can reliably (consistently) hear a difference between two things - something that can be reported flawlessly and which many audio product claims fail.
Lostinseattle, I agree with your comments. With the addition, you need a scale to measure the skill level of people doing the testing, in this case it also helps if you do a hearing tests on the people doing the scoring, and you also need to understand what a particular person appreciates. The subject gets to be complicated in a hurry, but not unmanageable. Connecting blind test data to engineering measurements is the hard part, but in some cases it is well known. I read these blogs because occasional someone will make a comment that adds one more layer to the problem. The idea is to get your arms around as much information and ideas as possible and continue to search for more.
Audio, exactly correct. To me, this is simple logic, and so many people let their emotions or preconceptions color their ideas. They become entrenched in a position. Some will say I’m not open because I don’t agree with their more limited views on a subject, and that I don’t agree that their position must be inscribed in stone.