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I was tempted to go drop $8500 on these awesome speaker cables so I could be like Whiplash (see customer pictures), but I'm curious, if I use them for my audio system, will they actually make a perceptible difference over some low gauge copper wire?

At what point do speaker cables start to suffer diminishing returns, and do "audiophiles" actually have the uncanny ability to detect the differences?

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    You can bet you will notice a difference, just don't expect your friends too. (Or perhaps they will in the hope that they can sell you some multi-GHz ultra tweeters and a magic ferrite ring for $1000+?)
    – Thomas O
    Commented May 5, 2011 at 7:09
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    Speaker cables are one of the links in your audio chain, which is only as good as its weakest link. No speaker cable will improve the signal coming out of your amplifier. The best your cables can do is deliver the (properly reproduced and amplified) signal to your speakers with minimum loss, hoping that the speakers can render them nicely without any further loss. As a rule of thumb, your cables should cost about %3-5 of what your setup costs. So those cables make sense only if your setup is around $170.000 :)
    – edgerunner
    Commented May 5, 2011 at 7:50
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    The user reviews on that cable are hilarious
    – Nobody
    Commented May 5, 2011 at 10:52
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    You could have asked the same question on Electronics SE.
    – sharptooth
    Commented May 5, 2011 at 13:36
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    @MarkRobinson: Respected by whom? Every Bose speaker I've ever heard sounded quite dreadful. It looks to me like Bose survives on marketing, not anything like technical superiority. If you want some good speaker with a name starting with "B", listen to some B&W's and see if you don't hear some difference.
    – user2046
    Commented May 10, 2011 at 21:47

2 Answers 2

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The only perceptible difference will be the tilt of your seated body due to a substantially smaller wallet.

Unless you require speaker cable runs of 50+ feet, where shielding is actually important, there are no benefits to the exorbitantly expensive speaker cabling. There have been anectodal, supposedly blind tests confirming that Monster(tm) cables sound no better than a coat hanger.

We gathered up a 5 of our audio buddies. We took my "old" Martin Logan SL-3 (not a bad speaker for accurate noise making) and hooked them up with Monster 1000 speaker cables [ed. Monster Ultra Series THX 1000 Audio Interconnects] (decent cables according to the audio press). We also rigged up 14 gauge, oxygen free Belden stranded copper wire with a simple PVC jacket. Both were 2 meters long. They were connected to an ABX switch box allowing blind fold testing. Volume levels were set at 75 dB at 1000KHz. A high quality recording of smooth, trio, easy listening jazz was played (Piano, drums, bass). None of us had heard this group or CD before, therefore eliminating biases. The music was played. Of the 5 blind folded, only 2 guessed correctly which was the monster cable. (I was not one of them). This was done 7 times in a row! Keeping us blind folded, my brother switched out the Belden wire (are you ready for this) with simple coat hanger wire! Unknown to me and our 12 audiophile buddies, prior to the ABX blind test, he took apart four coat hangers, reconnected them and twisted them into a pair of speaker cables. Connections were soldered. He stashed them in a closet within the testing room so we were not privy to what he was up to. This made for a pair of 2 meter cables, the exact length of the other wires. The test was conducted. After 5 tests, none could determine which was the Monster 1000 cable or the coat hanger wire. Further, when music was played through the coat hanger wire, we were asked if what we heard sounded good to us. All agreed that what was heard sounded excellent, however, when A-B tests occurred, it was impossible to determine which sounded best the majority of the time and which wire was in use.

This site also lists some double blind tests where listeners could not pick the difference between $990 "T2" Speaker Cable and cheap 16 Gauge Zip Cord.

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    I think the most funny part is premium digital cables, like HDMI. What the hell can be better with them? 1s and 0s are sharper?
    – Andrey
    Commented May 5, 2011 at 16:52
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    +1 to the question and +1 to @Andrey. The only thing that premium digital cables can do is possibly accommodate longer runs than their bargain counterparts, but it generally only means that they can accommodate runs that are longer than the specifications for that type of cable without losing signal. After all, the digital signal is just an abstraction on top of an analog signal. Everything, at some level, is analog. Commented May 5, 2011 at 18:18
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    @Adam Robinson that's it! As far as analog is converted back to digital correctly (true for every normal cable) nothing in cable could matter. I read funny reviews for X000$ HDMIs like "colors are deeper" and other nonsense. People like to fool themselves, there is nothing that can change it.
    – Andrey
    Commented May 5, 2011 at 20:05
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    @Andrey, there are at least 2 ways that a cable can affect a digital signal: it can affect the noise which couples into other parts of the circuit, and it can affect the timing. Most of the time these effects are undetectable, and I have no trouble using the cheapest HDMI cable I can find. Commented May 5, 2011 at 22:49
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    @Nick: Oh I was talking about things like HDMI cables. Yes, for speaker wires it's common to use bare copper wire, but I bet the spring contacts on the speaker are nickel plated at least.
    – endolith
    Commented Aug 16, 2012 at 14:03
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There are a number of possibilities for ways that speaker wire could affect sound.

Larger wire will reduce DC resistance. Larger wire that isn't stranded will increase inductance, which will lead to increased impedance at higher frequencies. The insulation used will affect the capacitance between the wires. The construction of the cable (e.g., straight zip wire versus twisted or braided wires) will affect the degree to which outside electrical signals will induce a signal in the wire.

To get at least some idea of how much affect these factors could have, ran a few signals through some wire, and into the oscilloscope. The first piece of wire was a fairly normal 6 foot (or so) zip cord -- a bit heavier than many (16 gauge) but nothing terribly special. [Edit: Here's a picture: ]

enter image description here

The second was a piece of "special" speaker wire the store threw in when I bought an amplifier many years ago. If memory serves, it's called Kimber cable. It has 8 separate wires (4 of each color) that look like they're probably around 20 gauge each, all braided together:

enter image description here

I then took the 1 KHz square wave signal my oscilloscope supplies for calibrating, ran it through each piece of wire, and captured the result:

enter image description here

The upper trace went through the Kimber cable, the lower through the zip cord. As is pretty easily visible, there's clearly more noise present on the signal that went through the zip cord.

Now, I should point out that this is only a 400 mV signal, and the noise on it is peaking at about 150 mV. That means the power it represents is quite small: P = E2/R, and it's driving a 10 megohm oscilloscope input, giving roughly 2 1/4 nanowatts. If, for example, you were listening to music using an average of 1 watt, that would be a noise level around 86 dB down. Caveat: this is measuring well up into the radio frequency range, so a loudspeaker may not be able to reproduce all the noise being measured here -- but most of it is almost certainly at 60 Hz, which most loudspeakers can reproduce.

OTOH, this is noise induced after the amplifier, so it will remain nearly constant regardless of how loudly or softly you have the volume set. I'd have some serious doubts about being able to hear noise that's 86 dB down from the signal, but if you turn the volume down a lot, this would remain (at least close to) constant, and I can believe that it might start to become audible.

For reference, here's a picture from just touching the scope probe with my finger, but not the ground:

enter image description here

The basic sine wave is at 60 Hz, and the "roughness" of it represents the signals at other frequencies. Obviously, the vast majority is at 60 Hz.

I also did a trace of the 1 KHz square wave going directly from the test output to the 'scope's probe. Here it is:

enter image description here

At least offhand, I can't see enough difference between the direction connection and the Kimber cable to claim I'm measuring any difference at all. Perhaps tests at higher frequencies or using different signals, etc. would show some difference, but at least based on what I've seen in this test, I can't claim to measure anything.

Tentative Conclusion

The difference between zip cord and "real" speaker wire is measurable, and right at the point that it's difficult to say with certainty whether it's really audible or not. The "real" speaker wire I used, however, is passing the signal through cleanly enough that I'm extremely doubtful that anything else could pass the signal much more cleanly (though perhaps a lot longer cable would degrade the signal enough to leave room for something else to be better). I don't know what the Kimber cable cost, but since they threw it in with an amplifier that cost something like $600 (IIRC) I'd be quite surprised if it was more than $15-20 or so -- certainly not even close to thousands of dollars in any case.


For what it's worth, the scope is a Tektronix 7854, and I used a 7A26 vertical input amplifier and 7B85 horizontal unit. Realistically, the 'scope probably doesn't make much difference though. It would be a lot harder to duplicate the exact wire I used -- I can't find a brand marking on it; all it says is 60o, UL/CSA approved, 16 AWG. For that matter, the room your stereo is in probably won't have exactly the same level of RFI as my office -- but I don't have any particular reason to believe my office is particularly above or below average either.

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  • Care to post a picture of the zip cord? It seems very noisy, which would imply that people should be buying speaker cabling with at least some form of shielding.
    – John Lyon
    Commented May 6, 2011 at 4:11
  • @jozzas The twisting of the "special" cable is the trick in this example.
    – Rusty
    Commented May 6, 2011 at 9:22
  • @jozzas: I've added a picture, but I doubt it means much. @Rusty is almost certainly correct: the twisting means that (much closer to) identical voltages are induced in the (effectively) two conductors, so they cancel each other out much better. Of course, it's possible I happened to hit a particularly poor example. If I get a chance, I may measure with some other piece of wire today. I'm not sure where it is, but I should have more speaker wire around somewhere.
    – user2046
    Commented May 6, 2011 at 13:36
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    I'm skeptical. Pieces of wire don't just produce noise, other than Johnson noise (which would be maybe 10 nanovolts and white, not 100 mV and impulsive, as shown here), or triboelectric or microphonic noise, which would be obvious because it only happens when you move the cable around. Was one wire much longer than the other? How was it wired and what did you use to attach it at both ends? Is this a really old scope with grungy connectors?
    – endolith
    Commented May 11, 2012 at 20:31
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    I don't think any of this is about the wire producing noise, but about the wire acting as an antenna, and picking up various and sundry noise from the surroundings -- as illustrated, most of it is your basic 60 Hz from the house wiring. The scope is fairly old, but quite clean. As noted in a previous comment, the twisting/braiding of the special cable is almost certainly most of the difference.
    – user2046
    Commented May 11, 2012 at 21:16

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