Doug - (or anyone) would you do an experiment?
Run “burned in” cable to one speaker, and a brand new version of the exact same cable to the other. Invert the phase of one channel.
Play a track in mono. In theory, shouldn’t there be silence?
if there isn’t silence, an explanation could be that the sounds from each speaker are different and therefore don’t cancel, therefore the cable differences are real.
But, there are other explanations to discount. Maybe the reflection in the room are not perfectly symmetrical. So we can discount that by putting new cables to both speakers (or similarly burned in ones). Play mono out of phase again, and do we get silence now?
If we do get silence, then there is evidence that the lack of silence before was due to differences in the cables.
If we don’t get silence, then we know any differences actually due to cables will need to be unpicked from differences due to the room.
The noise in the room in the two scenarios can be measured (and listened to) and compared. We will then get an estimate of the relative effect of room reflection asymmetry as compared to cable asymmetry.
Thoughts? Mine are that in any home listening environment, the room reflection effect (and tiny variations in speaker build, etc) will completely dwarf any differences arising from cable burn in. It would be nice to know though.
First issue - am I right about inverting one channel of a mono sound resulting in noise cancellation?