Are older series speaker cables a bad investment??


Obviously several of the used speaker cables on AG have been discontinued and replaced by the next super-improved series. However, why assume an older series cable provides less quality sound than its newer sibling.

I have a friend who has a pair of Straightwire "Maestro" speaker cables that are about 8 years old. He claims they are the best sounding cables he has ever heard. I don't totally agree, but they do sound very good in his set-up. He has used Nordost, Analysis Plus, MIT, Crimson, Tara Labs, and Harmonic Technology

So, he is no slouch when it comes to speaker cables auditions which he sources through The Cable Company, and other audiophiles He did grudgingly admit that the Harmonic Technology Pro 10 and Pro 11 had somewhat better soundstaging and solid imaging ( I thought it was more than just "somewhat better" !!!)

However, the main question is:.... can a previous ( or two series before) series speaker cable sound better than a new improved version.?? I don't think most manufacturers would answer that question with a resounding "NO"
sunnyjim
Sunnyjim-

Absolutely! newer does not always = better. Most top tier cable/cord companies feel that every few years a newer 'product' must be developed and released. Therefore, leaving some very good older 'products' for the rest of us!

Keep us posted on your buying decision(s).
Got a serious question, ... really. Has anyone bot cryo'ed speaker cables? Results??
04-19-14: Bifwynne
Got a serious question, ... really. Has anyone bot cryo'ed speaker cables? Results??

I have owned speaker cables that were cryo treated (Jena Labs), and they sounded very good.
However, I have never heard the same cable before and after the cryo treatment, so I can't say what affect the cryo treatment process itself has on the sound.
Thanks Jim. The reason I asked on this thread is because it might be an inexpensive way to breath new life into older cables and I/Cs.

The metallurgy is way over my pay grade, so take what I write with a grain of salt. To the extent I understand the theory, cryo'ing an object to near absolute zero in some way reorders/realigns the crystaline structure of the material, be it vacume tubes, gun parts, machine tools, etc.

I wonder out loud if cryo'ing would improve the electrical performance and properties of cables and I'Cs.