Originally posted by WyWyWyWy
But why would cables make that much difference?
They are just a bunch of copper together to transmit signal, and if they are pure and thick enough there shouldn't be too much signal lose at all, no?
And oh I said per meter not per foot :~ So it is likely I need to spend some more on cabling too : p
But why would cables make that much difference?
They are just a bunch of copper together to transmit signal, and if they are pure and thick enough there shouldn't be too much signal lose at all, no?
And oh I said per meter not per foot :~ So it is likely I need to spend some more on cabling too : p
1) Cheap cables don't block RF (Radio Frequency) and EMI (ElectroMagnetic Interference), which cause 'noise' in the signal, thus degrading the quality of the sound.
2) Cheap cable and high gauge (thin cables) don't have the bandwidth (to steal a computer term) to carry the complete signal.
3) When the entire signal is carried across one cable, the different frequencies interfere with each other and are out of synch.
4) Different quality of materials will produce a better sound. This is true to point. Regular copper used in 'lamp wire' cable corrodes fast and doesn't sound as good as OFC (Oxygen Free Copper). Going beyond that, silver is said to be the best audio conductor, but costs a small fortune to make the cables out of it.
There are lots more, go to any cable maker site and you can read their FAQs.
Look for 16 AWG (1.5 mm^2), 'stranded copper', OFC speaker cable, and you'll be more than happy with it on your Sony reciever, without hurting your pocketbook. Interconnects (the cable between components, like DVD and reciever) should be OFC as well, in a good size thickness, like 1 mm^2. If you can find an Audio Quest s-video cable for your DVD, you won't regret it.
Jammrock
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