First, let me agree that there's way too much emphasis on cables. I am
every bit the skeptic.

I did not do a blind fold test, but what I did do was observe the
ability to hear low-level details that are right on the edge of
resolution. I used "A Case of You" from Diana Krall's Live in Paris and
"If I Were Blue" from Patricia Barber's Verse. The former has a lot of
ambient stuff: people coughing, pedal noise, hall reverb. The latter
has a nylon string guitar solo where Neal Alger takes a few breaths,
moves around a bit on his chair, and of course, finger noise on the
strings. I have used these cuts on many systems, and believe me,
sometimes you can hear these things and sometimes you can't (even the
ones you know to expect).

I checked the volume with an SPL meter to make sure there were no level
differences. While all cables showed some of this low level detail,
there was a general correlation between price and detail. I re-listened
when I thought I had heard something that I didn't hear on a cheaper
cable, and verified every time.

That says nothing about imaging, general tonal quality, etc. But I
think the theory is that if you are dropping discreet low level events,
you are probably also dropping transients, minor harmonics and other
parts of the signal that make it life-like, contribute to imaging, and
so on. At least, that was my theory.

As to why, I don't know. I have read some articles on coax cables that
talk about reflection. Digital signals travel as a pulse. Some people
say that cables that don't strictly offer 75 ohm impedance can cause
internal reflections (possibly other factors there too besides the
impedance) that cause collisions between the pulses. That can lead to
zeros becoming ones and vice versa, and if that happens a lot, some of
the signal is degraded.

Can that happen to an optical signal? Beyond my expertise. I have
generally found optical to be inferior to digital, as have many people,
but I don't why that would be either.

I do know that if you talk to engineers who work in data
communications, they can verify that optical cable quality is certainly
an issue for high load or high distance, and that carriers, for example,
spend more on cables that need it (is it single-mode vs. multi-mode
fiber that's the difference?). That may or may not be relevant to
carrying a single audio signal for a short distance.

AQ's propaganda shows one being able to read a small "e" from a book
through the Optilink 3, and not through the 1, but my eyes are way past
being able to do that. Nice stunt, but I don't know if it's relevant or
not. Some of AQ's stuff seems full of it (most reviewers pooh-poohed
their battery-powered cable jackets, for example), so who knows?

To put it in perspective, the cheap Radio Shack cable was acceptable.
However, why would one buy a DAC, etc., if you weren't looking to
squeeze the most out of your setup? I don't own any cables more
expensive than this, so I'm not buying into Nordost Valhalla type
craziness, but I thought the $200 was worth it. I didn't really think
the $80 ones were better enough than the Radio Shack, though. YMMV


-- 
mschlack
------------------------------------------------------------------------
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