Members Sgt. Rock Posted December 18, 2012 Members Share Posted December 18, 2012 A buddy of mine came to my house the other night with a Lava cable, telling me it was the best there is. I'm using a 20 year old Ames department store cable. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members Bob Dey Posted December 18, 2012 Members Share Posted December 18, 2012 I like ProCo because they're made in my home town and have a lifetime warranty. There's a difference of quality in cables and the prices reflect it. Cheap jacks are probably the biggest difference, but I'm not the expert on this. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members Bobby1Note Posted December 18, 2012 Members Share Posted December 18, 2012 The differences that matter, are in the quality of the construction, and the components used. There are a lot of over-priced, under-performing cables that get marketed to folks who don't know the difference. I detest cheaply constructed cables, with inferior quality connectors and inadequate strain-reliefs. I also stay away from the "hyped" marketing" cables. Most of my cables are from EWI (Audiopile.net). Very well constructed from quality components, and very popular among the pro-sound guys. I've probably got 50 or so mic and instrument cables, plus an 8/4 stage-snake, 16/8 reel-snake, a bunch of 8-channel patch-snakes, etc, and not a single failure in the last five years that I've been using them. I've also got a few Digi-Flex cables that are quite nice. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members dboomer Posted December 18, 2012 Members Share Posted December 18, 2012 Guitar cables or others? Guitar cables can make a big difference to the sound because the cable becomes an element of a tone circuit with the guitar's pickups and volume control. Of course what might sound great with one guitar might be a problem with another because of the differences in pickups and volume pot impedance. As far as mic cables, line cables (low impedance) and speaker cables they generally make were little to zero difference sonically compared to guitar cables. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members cephus Posted December 19, 2012 Members Share Posted December 19, 2012 One thing that I look at now is exactly how chinese is the cable. I have bought a couple 20' cables that I got a good deal on, but the end is a tiny bit larger than other cables. It doesn't matter on a guitar type plug, but I have a couple effects boxes that apparently have some tighter tolerances inside the jack. I had several cables that I bought years ago that were still good and only recently had to start replacing them. I have found that you just can't trust the off the shelf cables from samash or GC anymore. You have to shop around and find ones that you have testimony aren't crap. In the past 3 or 4 years I have bought probably 15 cables that turned out to be {censored}te in one fashion or another. I had a friend who used to say "Pay me now, or pay me later." I think that applies Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members SLScott86 Posted December 19, 2012 Members Share Posted December 19, 2012 I've used a lot of kinda homemade cables from Redco. A bit of a paradox because it's only fun to make a cable once in a while. But you can only justify buying a spool of cable if you have a lot to make like to wire a studio. I'd still recommend it though. Like, for example, 100 feet of Mogami instrument cable for 81 bucks.http://www.redco.com/shopdisplayprod...strument+Cable 10 Neutrik connectors for $47http:// http://www.redco.com/shopdis...=TS+Connectors And you have five of these top end $60 18 footers for a little over $24 each.http://www.zzounds.com/item--MOGGTRR Not for everyone, but pretty awesome for some. It's also strangely rewarding. I just realized you can order in as small of quantities as you want. That makes it more appealing. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members Telecruiser Posted December 19, 2012 Members Share Posted December 19, 2012 http://audiopile.net/products/Mic_In...cutsheet.shtml Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members Notes_Norton Posted December 20, 2012 Members Share Posted December 20, 2012 Like everything else, there is a point of diminishing returns - for each extra dollar you spend on the cable, you get less and less improvement. The cheapest cables have poor shielding and guaranteed to fall apart jacks. Most moderate priced cables have great shielding and good jacks. Super expensive cable have great shielding and good jacks and not much more than most moderate cables. I go for the mid-range myself. Notes Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members SLScott86 Posted December 20, 2012 Members Share Posted December 20, 2012 There is definitely a point of diminishing returns. The EWI cables Telecruiser posted above are a great choice for the money. For what it's worth, I've never broken a cable or even seen one break, with the exception of Monster Rock cables. I've seen multiple connectors break on those things, but with the warranty the guys still use them. I am a huge fan of Neutrik connectors though. They just have that reassuring feel to them. But then again, do did the monster cables. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Moderators daddymack Posted December 20, 2012 Moderators Share Posted December 20, 2012 For years I made my own cables, I had access to Belden shielded cable (scrap lengths from production could run 22'), and to Mil-spec jacks (collected damaged units, pieced together enough rings tips and sleeves), and I am a NASA certified solderer. Then Monster, ProCo, etc offered lifetime warranties...at reasonable prices (on sale) with great quality and I said...'hell, why not?'.Would I buy cables for more than $1 per foot? Not a chance....A good friend of mine has an endorsement deal with one of those hoity toity cable companies (also with PRS and a few others), and was trying to convince me not only was the cable better, but there was a +terminal and a - terminal to the cables. I whipped out a multimeter and showed him that the resistance was identical either way. He still insists I am wrong, because the company told him to plug the cable in a certain way... BTW, I noticed that SLScott86 mentioned making 18' cables... I learned this many years ago, and all my guitar cables are 18' or shorter. The reason not to go over 18'? It is one wavelength of the signal from the guitar. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Members dboomer Posted December 20, 2012 Members Share Posted December 20, 2012 Originally Posted by daddymack The reason not to go over 18'? It is one wavelength of the signal from the guitar. ??? Educate me here. An 18 foot wavelength would correspond to a sine wave of 62 Hz. What does the length of that have to to with electron flow in wire? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Archived
This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.