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Speaker Cable

  • 05-05-2009 10:58am
    #1
    Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,212 ✭✭✭


    Hey guys,
    I'm getting a new surround setup at home. I've ordered the Onkyo607 and going to order the Tannoy Arenas. Looking for suggestions on what cable to get. Obviously you get what you pay for but dont want to overspend!

    Cheers.


Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,027 ✭✭✭eddiem74


    I picked up some in Maplins for use with my Onkyo 605 which I then replaced with a 606. I think it was 12AWG i.e. quite thick, but fitted my speakers and banana plugs fine.

    They were selling reels of around 10M for €20 (or something like that), but I went up to the counter and instead got a 50M reel for a better price margain. Depends on how much you need really.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,212 ✭✭✭chris_ie


    Cheers eddie.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 10 conbon


    try the lads in universal sound and picture, they are cable specialists.
    West dublin. Should find their number handy enough on google.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 717 ✭✭✭akaSol


    chris_ie wrote: »
    Hey guys,
    I'm getting a new surround setup at home. I've ordered the Onkyo607 and going to order the Tannoy Arenas. Looking for suggestions on what cable to get. Obviously you get what you pay for but dont want to overspend!

    Cheers.
    Arena or Arena Light , Chris?
    And better cable if your looking for the Tanoys

    >Sol


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 20,121 ✭✭✭✭cnocbui


    There's no 'better' with speaker cable. One 12awg cable will function exactly like any other 12awg cable.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 717 ✭✭✭akaSol


    cnocbui wrote: »
    There's no 'better' with speaker cable. One 12awg cable will function exactly like any other 12awg cable.
    Its a matter of cucumber for your ears. You can either taste it/hear it or you cant.
    If you cant the cheep as bank shares will work for you.
    If you can it DOES make a noticeable difference.

    >Sol


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 20,121 ✭✭✭✭cnocbui


    akaSol wrote: »
    Its a matter of cucumber for your ears. You can either taste it/hear it or you cant.
    If you cant the cheep as bank shares will work for you.
    If you can it DOES make a noticeable difference.

    >Sol

    Well there are prizes on offer of well over a million dolllars for anyone who can hear a difference between speaker cables in a double blind trial.

    I know for a fact that some of these prizes have been on offer for over a decade. So with over a million at stake, you would think someone, especially those golden eared reviewers who promote the cable rubbish, would have stepped forward to claim the prizes. But they haven't - funny that. In fact, the golden eared reviewers run like rabbits any time anyone suggests they take part in a double blind trial.

    So until someone in the world can prove they can hear an audible difference between speaker cables, I have not the slightest hesitation in saying you are wrong.

    http://www.edn.com/blog/1700000170/post/1150015315.html


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,212 ✭✭✭chris_ie


    akaSol wrote: »
    Arena or Arena Light , Chris?
    And better cable if your looking for the Tanoys

    >Sol

    Its the Arena. Gettin them from Richersounds, should have the whole setup next week.

    Cheers for the replies guys.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,323 ✭✭✭Slaphead07


    cnocbui wrote: »
    There's no 'better' with speaker cable. One 12awg cable will function exactly like any other 12awg cable.

    Irrespective of screening, plugs, number of stands or quality of construction? I don't think so. Not to mention cables made from copper core, cat5, carbon or hybrids. Speaker cable doesn't have a lot of work to do so the notion of one being "better" than another is slightly moot but different cables do have different sound signatures.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,027 ✭✭✭eddiem74


    chris_ie wrote: »
    Its the Arena. Gettin them from Richersounds, should have the whole setup next week.

    Cheers for the replies guys.

    I'm sure RS can sort you with speaker cable too. :)

    Oh, and check out this RS Offer quickly to ensure you are getting the best price on your 607 ! ;)


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,212 ✭✭✭chris_ie


    eddiem74 wrote: »
    I'm sure RS can sort you with speaker cable too. :)

    Oh, and check out this RS Offer quickly to ensure you are getting the best price on your 607 ! ;)

    Yeah I ordered last week when the price was still at 399 so I think I got in on time! :) The price changed to 499 the next day.

    Was looking at some of the cable on the RS site but not sure whats good and whats not! Checkin up some of the cable here online now.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 6,408 ✭✭✭studiorat


    If I may, there is a slightly different sound signature between cables. An example in the pro-audio area is Vo-Vox cable, which is actually brighter sounding than other cables. Mind you if you move your head half an inch or leave the room and return I defy anybody to tell the difference.

    That said for power amp to speakers I usually use 2 cores of a mains cable. Considering this is the set-up a majority of professional studios use for actually making the recordings. I see little point in worrying too much about what cable you use for a playback system after that.

    Actually thinking about it, surely you should be using a cable that when used with the speakers presents the correct load to the power amp...


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 20,121 ✭✭✭✭cnocbui


    Slaphead07 wrote: »
    Irrespective of screening, plugs, number of stands or quality of construction? I don't think so. Not to mention cables made from copper core, cat5, carbon or hybrids. Speaker cable doesn't have a lot of work to do so the notion of one being "better" than another is slightly moot but different cables do have different sound signatures.

    Speaker cables don't need 'screening'. The number of strands doesn't make any difference either, except to the mechanical flexibilty of the resulting cable.

    Quality of construction doesn't matter, except for aesthetics, so long as there are no actual open circuits in the cable ;).

    You were right about speaker cable not having much work to do, I can't argue with that. All it has to do is get sufficient current to the speakers without heating up and melting.

    There's over a million dollars just waiting for you, all you have to do is prove you can reliably hear those differences you claim you can. No one else has managed to.

    Have you ever heard of John Dunlavy? He was a noted electrical engineer who had his own company that specialised in satellite communications. He later formed a company in Australia called Duntech, which manufactured high end speakers. He later returned to the US and formed a new company making speakers to his designs, which were all highly regarded. Here's what he had to say about cables:
    Date: Tue, 5 Nov 1996 13:08:50 -0500
    From: 102365.2026@compuserve.com (Dunlavy Audio Labs)
    To: bass@mcfeeley.cc.utexas.edu (bass group)
    Subject: Cable Nonsense (Long)
    Having read some of the recent comments on several of the Internet audio groups, concerning audible differences between interconnect and loudspeaker cables, I could not resist adding some thoughts about the subject as a concerned engineer possessing credible credentials.
    To begin, several companies design and manufacture loudspeaker and interconnect cables which they proudly claim possess optimized electrical properties for the audiophile applications intended. However, accurate measurements of several popularly selling cables reveal significant differences that call into question the technical goals of their designer. These differences also question the capability of the companies to perform accurate measurements of important cable performance properties. For example, any company not possessing a precision C-L-R bridge, a Vector Impedance Meter, a Network Analyzer, a precision waveform and impulse generator, wideband precision oscilloscopes, etc., probably needs to purchase them if they are truly serious about designing audio cables that provide premium performance.
    The measurable properties of loudspeaker cables that are important to their performance include characteristic impedance (series inductance and parallel capacitance per unit length), loss resistance (including additional resistance due to skin-effect losses versus frequency), dielectric losses versus frequency (loss tangent, etc.), velocity-of-propagation factor, overall loss versus frequency into different impedance loads, etc.
    Measurable properties of interconnect cables include all of the above, with the addition of those properties of the dielectric material that contribute to microphonic noise in the presence of ambient vibration, noise, etc. (in combination with a D.C. off-set created by a pre-amp output circuit, etc.).
    While competent cable manufacturers should be aware of these measurements and the need to make them during the design of their cables, the raw truth is that most do not! Proof of this can be found in the absurd buzzard-salve, snake-oil and meaningless advertising claims found in almost all magazine ads and product literature for audiophile cables. Perhaps worse, very few of the expensive, high-tech appearing cables we have measured appear to have been designed in accordance with the well-known laws and principles taught by proper physics and engineering disciplines. (Where are the costly Government Consumer Protection people who are supposed to protect innocent members of the public by identifying and policing questionable performance claims, misleading specifications, etc.?) --- Caveat Emptor!
    For example, claiming that copper wire is directional, that slow-moving electrons create distortion as they haphazardly carry the signal along a wire, that cables store and release energy as signals propagate along them, that a final energy component (improperly labeled as Joules) is the measure of the tonality of cables, ad nauseum, are but a few of the non-entities used in advertisements to describe cable performance.
    Another pet peeve of mine is the concept of a special configuration included with a loudspeaker cable which is advertised as being able to terminate the cable in a matter intended to deliver more accurate tonality, better imaging, lower noise, etc. The real truth is that this special configuration contains nothing more than a simple, inexpensive network intended to prevent poorly-designed amplifiers, with a too-high slew-rate (obtained at the expense of instability caused by too much inverse-feedback) from oscillating when connected to a loudspeaker through a low-loss, low-impedance cable. When this box appears at the loudspeaker-end of a cable, it seldom contains nothing more than a Zobel network, which is usually a series resistor-capacitor network, connector in parallel with the wires of the cable. If it is at the amplifier-end of the cable, it is probably either a parallel resistor-inductor network, connected in series with the cable conductors (or a simple cylindrical ferrite sleeve covering both conductors). But the proper place for such a network, if it is needed to insure amplifier stability and prevent high-frequency oscillations, is within the amplifier - not along the loudspeaker cable. Hmmm!
    Having said all this, are there really any significant audible differences between most cables that can be consistently identified by experienced listeners? The answer is simple: very seldom! Those who claim otherwise do not fully grasp the power of the old Placebo-Effect - which is very alive and well among even the most well-intentioned listeners. The placebo-effect renders audible signatures easy to detect and describe - if the listener knows which cable is being heard. But, take away this knowledge during blind or double-blind listening comparisons and the differences either disappear completely or hover close to the level of random guessing. Speaking as a competent professional engineer, designer and manufacturer, nothing would please me and my company's staff more than being able to design a cable which consistently yielded a positive score during blind listening comparisons against other cables. But it only rarely happens - if we wish to be honest!
    Oh yes, we have heard of golden-eared audiophiles who claim to be able to consistently identify huge, audible differences between cables. But when these experts have visited our facility and were put to the test under carefully-controlled conditions, they invariably failed to yield a score any better than chance. For example, when led to believe that three popular cables were being compared, varying in size from a high-quality 12 AWG ZIP-CORD to a high-tech looking cable with a diameter exceeding an inch, the largest and sexiest looking cable always scored best - even though the CABLES WERE NEVER CHANGED and they listened to the ZIP Cord the entire time.
    Sorry, but I do not buy the claims of those who say they can always audibly identify differences between cables, even when the comparisons are properly controlled to ensure that the identity of the cable being heard is not known by the listener. We have accomplished too many true blind comparisons with listeners possessing the right credentials, including impeccable hearing attributes, to know that real, audible differences seldom exist - if the comparisons are properly implemented to eliminate other causes such as system interactions with cables, etc.
    Indeed, during these comparisons (without changing cables), some listeners were able to describe in great detail the big differences they thought they heard in bass, high-end detail, etc. (Of course, the participants were never told the NAUGHTY TRUTH, lest they become an enemy for life!)
    So why does a reputable company like DAL engage in the design and manufacture of audiophile cables? The answer is simple: since significant measurable differences do exist and because well-known and understood transmission line theory defines optimum relationships between such parameters as cable impedance and the impedance of the load (loudspeaker), the capacitance of an interconnect and the input impedance of the following stage, why not design cables that at least satisfy what theory has to teach? And, since transmission line theory is universally applied, quite successfully, in the design of cables intended for TV, microwave, telephone, and other critical applications requiring peak performance, etc., why not use it in designing cables intended for critical audiophile applications? Hmmm! To say, as some do, that there are factors involved that competent engineers and scientists have yet to identify is utter nonsense and a cover-up for what should be called pure snake oil and buzzard salve - in short, pure fraud. If any cable manufacturer, writer, technician, etc. can identify such an audible design parameter that cannot be measured using available lab equipment or be described by known theory, I can guarantee a nomination for a Nobel Prize.
    Anyway, I just had to share some of my favorite Hmmm's, regarding cable myths and seemingly fraudulent claims, with audiophiles on the net who may lack the technical expertise to separate fact from fiction with regard to cable performance. I also welcome comments from those who may have other opinions or who may know of something I might have missed or misunderstood regarding cable design, theory or secret criteria used by competitors to achieve performance that cannot be measured or identified by conventional means. Lets all try to get to the bottom of this mess by open, informed and objective inquiry.
    I sincerely believe the time has come for concerned audiophiles, true engineers, competent physicists, academics, mag editors, etc. to take a firm stand regarding much of this disturbing new trend in the blatantly false claims frequently found in cable advertising. If we fail to do so, reputable designers, engineers, manufacturers, magazine editors and product reviewers may find their reputation tarnished beyond repair among those of the audiophile community we are supposed to serve.
    Best regards,
    John Dunlavy
    http://www.verber.com/mark/ce/cables.html


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,212 ✭✭✭chris_ie


    Also if anyone happens to see any Arena desk stand/wallmounts available in silver at good price give me a shout! :D They're friggin expensive!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,323 ✭✭✭Slaphead07


    cnocbui wrote: »
    Speaker cables don't need 'screening'. The number of strands doesn't make any difference either, except to the mechanical flexibilty of the resulting cable.

    I stopped reading after that.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,236 ✭✭✭Idleater


    Slaphead07 wrote: »
    I stopped reading after that.

    I stopped after "There's no 'better' with speaker cable. One 12awg cable will function exactly like any other 12awg cable."

    there are so many engineering blah blah blah in this thread that all poor mr Ohm and his law must be turning in his grave.

    Solid Core wins in my system.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,323 ✭✭✭Slaphead07


    nereid wrote: »
    Solid Core wins in my system.

    Aye, I always advise people to try 'twin & earth' mains cable first before buying anything expensive. In a lot of systems it will do fine. Solid copper core gives a nice warm bass.

    Anyway, I use my ears to decide what cable I buy not a multi-meter.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 717 ✭✭✭akaSol


    On the cable side you believe what you want.
    My concern is in the fidelity of the amp verses the Arena speakers.
    From memory, they where like the KHT3005 series. As such the 605 and the 606 struggled to give them both that extra detail the 8xx series gave them.
    To my ears at least.

    >Sol


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,323 ✭✭✭Slaphead07


    akaSol wrote: »
    My concern is in the fidelity of the amp verses the Arena speakers.
    >Sol

    Rest easy lad. The Tannoys are nice but simple satellite speakers that could be driven easily by an angry gnat. The 'fidelity of the amp" simply doesn't enter into it. They're not Tannoy Westministers you know.
    I've recommended, and indeed setup, the Arenas for 3 people over the last while and really the 606 is more than good enough. My 606 currently drives 2 big ol' Tannoys (fronts) two floorstanding Castles (sides) and small AE Compacts (rears) with ease.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 717 ✭✭✭akaSol


    I came from a 605 running KHT2005's to a 863se on a IQ7 set.
    I have heard allot of movies and music between 07 and now.
    I personally feel the Arenas are let not being pushed to their full cababilitys by this class of amp.
    If you have heard the 876 whacking some of the audio details in WANTED or an Eagles concert on the Arenas its a whole leap in a different direction.
    But its all about opinion. That's just mine.

    >Sol


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 79 ✭✭Hifi Keith


    akaSol wrote: »
    I came from a 605 running KHT2005's to a 863se on a IQ7 set.
    I have heard allot of movies and music between 07 and now.
    I personally feel the Arenas are let not being pushed to their full cababilitys by this class of amp.
    If you have heard the 876 whacking some of the audio details in WANTED or an Eagles concert on the Arenas its a whole leap in a different direction.
    But its all about opinion. That's just mine.

    >Sol

    I wanted to offer a 5% discount on already well priced cable but havn't heard back from the mods yet sorry


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 20,121 ✭✭✭✭cnocbui


    Hifi Keith wrote: »
    I wanted to offer a 5% discount on already well priced cable but havn't heard back from the mods yet sorry

    They probably don't believe in wasting money on that mumbo jumbo either.


  • Moderators, Technology & Internet Moderators, RicherSounds.ie Moderator Posts: 2,505 Mod ✭✭✭✭The Ritz


    Hifi Keith wrote: »
    I wanted to offer a 5% discount on already well priced cable but havn't heard back from the mods yet sorry


    Trading is not allowed on this forum, if you have something to sell please take it to Adverts.ie or the selling site of your choice. I don't know who you've been in contact with, but you have a standing infraction for touting for business and have been warned on threads by me about commercial activity not being allowed here.

    Please PM me with the details of who you have been in contact with. Until you get some response on the issue, please do not make reference to your own commercial activities on the Home Entertainment Forums. You have been given a great deal of slack on this issue.


    Ritz.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,241 ✭✭✭Darragh


    Hifi Keith wrote: »
    I wanted to offer a 5% discount on already well priced cable but havn't heard back from the mods yet sorry

    Hi Keith

    If you'd like to talk to us about advertising, please drop me a line at hello@boards.ie with all your company details plus details of the offer and we'll get back to you as soon as possible.

    Thanks

    Darragh


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