What Speaker Cables Taught Me About Audiophiles


Hold on tight because none of this story ends up where you think it will.

Ages ago I did a half-blind speaker cable test with friends in the building who loved Jazz. The amp was a Yamaha P2100 with Focal profile speakers. Cables were Mogami vs. Wireworld. Source was a CD player through a Theta Casanova preamp / processor (oh how i miss it).

I thought i was going to impress my friends with how great the Wireworld Silver 7s sounded. In particular the imaging I thought was so much better than through the Mogami Sound Runners.

To the surprise of many "scientists" here, my friends did in fact hear a noticeable difference between the two sets of cables. They absolutely preferred the Mogami.

I was a little shocked. I tried very hard to keep a poker face, and not guide them either way while switching. They could not see which cables were connected from their listening location.

What happened? Did they not understand how much better the imaging was with the Wireworld?

Well, actually they did and they didn’t care. Richard and his wife did notice that but felt that the loss of treble and beat was not worth it. Hands down for them the Mogami was the clear winner.

What this taught me was:

  1. Speaker cables can make a small but noticeable difference
  2. The improved imaging came at a cost of treble energy
  3. Most listeners wouldn’t make the trade. They’d rather have the tempo and foot tapping experience over my precious deep into the room imaging.

Over time of listening back and forth between my Wireworld collection and Mogami or DH Labs pure silver IC’s and Mogami speaker cables I’ve given that up. I think my neighbors were right. I’d rather have the beat and energy. It’s a fetish I was giving up far too much for.

I'm definitely not encouraging you to overhaul all your cables, but rather saying that we audiophiles need to be conscious that sometimes our preferences are unique to our culture and that the "normal" consumer may not share them at all. 

erik_squires

@jonwolfpell - I am often reminded of the late, great director, Akira Kurosawa at times. While shooting on an active volcano he ordered extra smoke be brought in, much to the surpise of the effects team. He reasoned, accurately, that while the crew could actually feel the heat coming off the volcano while they stood there the movie audience would not, and they needed to make up for their inability to capture the heat with extra visuals. I think we do the same thing with our sound systems. We can’t see the orchestra so we look for more imaging with our ears.

Also, Kurosawa made a huge blunder. He should have pattented a thermal version of Sensorrround, and surrounded the movie audience with on demand furnaces. laugh

I agree with all that is said here.  More expensive cables are better only if YOU like them better.  In my experience, they can clean up the higher end of the signal, but again, some will like it and others won't. 

Welcome back Erik, I have not seen you in the postings lately, and I always enjoy your thoughtful comments. What I take from your experience is that "different" is not the same as "better" which is the mistake I think many people make when they "upgrade" and are pleased that their new purchase made a big difference.

I have made my standard of comparison trueness to live performance and my experience has been that it need not be terribly expensive to equal or better live performances with home playback. Sometime ago @atmasphere introduced the term "Veblin good" (A Veblen good is a type of luxury good, named after American economist Thorstein Veblen, for which the demand increases as the price increases, in apparent contradiction of the law of demand, resulting in an upward-sloping demand curve) in another thread. I am very grateful to him because that term describes what I think goes on with many audiophiles who automatically equate different and more expensive with better.

Q What Speaker Cables Taught Me About Audiophiles?

A Futility in many forum cables posts , with some cable threads that can regrettably descend into cable post flaming wars .

There are two intransigent and diametrically opposed “cables matter” versus “cables don’t matter” cohorts …..with both opposing sides firmly entrenched in their experiences and beliefs , with absolutely zero chance of ever convincing the opposing side to change their minds .

That Mexican standoff predicated other large audio forums (including inter alia CANUCKAUDIOMART and it’s subsidiary in USAUDIOMART…) to publish cautionary forum posting conduct rules against fostering or engaging in cable war posts, including reprimand and potential forum expulsion consequences

@akg_ca I disagree. I am in the middle. I believe that cables make a difference but I don't feel they are the best place to try and adjust the sound of a system. Changing cables is like shooting in the dark with very expensive ammunition. Some may choose to do so but I do not.