Yes, cables do make a difference -- regardless of price...


I thought you may find this interesting…or not.  I know, another "cable post".  Disclaimer up front — I am a believer that cables can make a difference in the sound that you hear from your system.  With my speakers, like most high(er) efficiency speakers, I can hear large and small changes made to the system components — and cables are part of that system.

What I want to share is an exercise that I went through with my better half in setting up her recording equipment that she will be using to record audio books.  The hardware part of the system is simple:  Audio Technica Cardioid Condenser Microphone AT2035 connected with a XLR cable to the Focusrite Scarlett 2i2 preamp.

We started with the XLR cable that came with the microphone and recorded the short introduction of the book she has been contracted to record.  Then she recorded the same section using each of the our XLR cables I have on hand:  Vovox Excelsus, Mogami 2549, Gotham GAC-3, and Grimm TPR. Each of the cables have the same Neutrik connector and are very good studio cables that I have used in my system at one time.

Listening through headphones via the Scarlett 2i2, it was super easy to hear distinct differences in these cables.  The differences were not small and very apparent.  In the end, the Mogami cable was the winner — it seemed more open and warmer than the other cables and suited the tone of her voice the best. I have heard similar differences from these cables in my stereo system but not to the significant degree borne out by this exercise. 

To keep going, today I replaced the $10 USB C to C cable that I bought as an “upgrade” from the Scarlett 2i2 to a MacBook Air with a $70 Audioquest Forest cable. We were more than surprised that with the AQ cable in the system the drop of the noise floor was very significant and the blackness of background made the sound even more crystal clear.

The purpose of this post is not to promote or compares cables, just a public service posting for those of you who do not believe cables make a difference.  They really do affect how your system sounds (positive or negative) and if you cannot hear a difference then maybe looking at the transparency of your system is a place you should examine.

Imagine peace everyone.

crozbo

As always, it comes down to this simple question: "Who are you going to believe, me or your lying ears?"

@markwd, I have seen some research work on people being able to detect sounds outside of the typical 20kHz window, though it seems largely irrelevant to music reproduction, so while there might be yet-to-be-understood science out there, the default intellectually honest posture is wait-and-see while instead focusing on what we know impacts audio reproduction.

Your statement in italics hardly suggests you are scientific in your approach to a topic. Show us your research into and the proof of your conclusion. The ability for a system to produce a response way higher than 20kHz is highly relevant. It is why supertweeters with output up to 90kHZ brings so much to the party. Although a sine wave above 20kHz can not be heard by the human ear it forms part of the sound wave. The high harmonics complete the waveform rendering the resultant sound more lifelike. Go do research you may be able to learn something and consider using your ears sometime. The science is understood just not by you.

Flashing your credentials is totally underwhelming and it appears that your vast knowledge has not endowed you with an open and reasoning stance. Remember there was a time not too long ago that scientists proved conclusively that a bumblebee could not fly which of course was later debunked.

 
 

I take careful note of the way that the word “belief” always enters discussion on this topic.

I’m agnostic. Beliefs are for theists and atheists.

 

 

markwd

... The important question is when are we going to get any good evidence for cables? ...

If that’s the important question, then the next question is: When are you going to start collecting this evidence, rather than requesting that we do your work for you?

As you know, there is abundant evidence. It’s just not the type of evidence you like..