Understanding Cables
        and Wine 
         The value of specialty
        interconnects, speaker cables, and power cords remains one of the most hotly debated
        topics among audio enthusiasts. Whereas most people will concede that source components,
        such as CD players, can sound different from one another, there remains a great deal of
        skepticism about the differences in a systems sound that can be achieved by changing
        cables. On the face of it, such skepticism may seem reasonable, but I want to examine here
        some reasons for thinking that, in the end, such skepticism is not well founded. 
        One reason for the skepticism comes from a dogmatic
        reliance on measurements. The use of measurements in describing audio products goes back
        many years, and perhaps reached its zenith in the late 1970s and early 80s, when
        bigger numbers automatically meant better. By relying solely on measurements, a company
        could market an amplifier as having a power rating of hundreds of watts. Told that more
        watts were better than fewer, consumers shopped accordingly. Thus, buying decisions were
        made based not on how components sounded, but on how they measured. This reliance on
        numbers continues today at such large retailers as Best Buy and Circuit City. Employees at
        such stores can tell you how many watts an amplifier produces or how many inputs a
        receiver has, but few can tell you how a component sounds. 
        Reliance on measurements, then, makes good marketing sense
        for electronics manufacturers and retailers; it is much more easy to relay such
        information to a sales staff than to rely on -- or train -- that staff to be
        discriminating listeners. The audio marketplace thus has a built-in reliance on
        measurements. When cables are approached with that mentality, it seems that all cables
        should be pretty much the same.  
        The dependence on measurements goes deeper than a simple
        marketing tool, however. It is part of the 20th-century zeitgeist, which embraced a
        scientific methodology that relies essentially on quantitative methods for investigating
        and understanding the world. There is a pervasive belief that if there is a difference
        between two things, then that difference must be measurable. The leap is then made that if
        there is no measurable difference, then there is no difference. There are also the common
        assumptions that what affects a listeners perception of sound is what is measurable
        in the lab, and that we have a much better understanding of the sound-producing properties
        of audio systems and of our own auditory perceptions than we actually do. 
        However, the failure to measure an audible difference does
        not indicate that there is no difference. It is possible that we do not understand what
        needs to be measured, or that there are too many variables for us to make a rigorously
        controlled study of the differences in sound. But this would still not indicate that there
        is no difference. What it does indicate is that science remains an insufficient tool for
        understanding all aspects of the world. In any of these cases, a reliance on measurements
        is not the only way to evaluate components or cables; we can also rely on our own
        perceptions. 
        Another reason for skepticism about cables is the fervor
        with which some enthusiasts discuss the differences cables can make. I think that, for
        some audio enthusiasts, cables represent an affordable change that they can make to their
        systems, and which they have embraced as a hobby unto itself. That is a fine hobby to
        have, but sometimes when such hobbyists talk about how cables sound, they begin to sound a
        bit mystical. A cable on its own has no sound -- it needs to be connected to other
        components to produce sound. When youre evaluating a cable, youre actually
        evaluating the whole signal chain, from source through to the speakers. Changing cables
        may alter the sound, but to then ascribe a sound to the cable is not correct. What cables
        contribute to the sound must be considered along with the components they are used with.
        Cables may sound great with some components, not so great with others. Like just about
        everything, cables are not intrinsically good or bad, but are better or worse only
        in relation to the rest of the system in which they are used. 
        I think being able to perceive differences in a
        systems sound with different cables is akin to being able to discern fine wine from
        merely good wine. If youre a wine drinker, think back to when you first began to
        drink. At the beginning, people are often unable to describe what they taste, and
        arent even sure which wines they like and which they dont. Over time, people
        develop the ability to discriminate between the wines they enjoy and those they dislike.
        Those who begin to care seriously about wine go on to learn how to describe their
        experiences in critical terms so that they can discuss with others not only which wines
        they like, but what about those wines they like so much. 
        Consider our friend Chris, who has recently become a wine
        enthusiast. In the past few months Chris has decided he likes very much the 2002 Veritas Vineyard Shiraz Christa
        Rolf. When he first tasted it, all he could tell us was that he liked it -- but after
        reading a lot of Robert Parker
        and attending weekly wine tastings, Chris can now tell us that the shiraz is
        "plump" and "spicy," has "hints of licorice and earth," and
        is "nicely textured." He is now happy to spend $14 for a bottle of this wine and
        think it a great bargain. Another friend, Randall, has no interest in wine and thinks
        Chris is making up all of these fancy descriptions. For him, wine is wine, and $14 is
        twice as much as the cheapest bottle he can get. Randall thinks Chris is out of his mind
        to spend so much. 
        I think most of us would assume that Chris has simply
        become a more discerning wine drinker. All of the properties that Chris can now discern --
        such as "hints of licorice" -- were always there, but he lacked the skills to
        articulate their presence. Randall, however, has no interest in wine, and so has never
        seen the point in acquiring the skills necessary to describe its tastes in such detail.
        Science, too, has failed to come up with quantifiable tests for "hints of
        licorice" or "nicely textured," but most of us do not assume that Chris is
        therefore making up the differences he describes. 
        If Chriss approach to wines is something you think is
        reasonable, then theres no reason a similar approach to the different sounds of
        different cables would not be just as reasonable. Just as Chris needed to train himself to
        discern subtle differences among wines, a budding audio enthusiast needs to train him- or
        herself to discern subtle differences in sound. 
        The only way to know if you like a particular wine or a
        particular cable is to try it. Even if you understand Chriss description of his
        favorite wine, without tasting it yourself, you wont know if youll like it as
        much as he does. If youre a wine enthusiast, his description will probably give you
        a better sense of whether or not youll share his taste, but only actually tasting
        the wine will confirm that suspicion. This is true with cables as well. You may read a
        description of a cable that makes it seem as if youd enjoy the difference it would
        make in the sound of your system, but only an audition of that cable in that system will
        tell you for sure. And having a nice glass of wine while you listen wont hurt. 
        
Eric D. Hetherington 
         
        
        
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