Finally, I'm a believer
Posted by: wrc on 11 November 2015
I'm relatively new to naim but I've been 'into' Hi Fi for roughly 10 years and in that time I was lead to believe that any decent guage speaker cable was indistinguishable from the next. Snake oil and the like.
When I bought my UnitiLite I also bought NAC A5 because I decided to buy into naim and that's what they suggest (obviously!) so until last night I'd only ever listened to the UL via NAC A5. It was late, I was feeling curious, and so I decided to try a little experiment and hooked up my old Audioquest FLX/Slip 14/4 cables just to hear if there really was a difference.
Well, there is. Thicker and duller, with less sparkle. Still good, but quite different. I reconnected the A5 and what struck me most was the crisper highs and much more definition in the bass. I repeated the experiment, different tracks, same result.
So, I'm converted. Apologies, this is probably old news to many on this forum but for me it was a revelation.
Before slagging off AudioQuest, have you actually tried the Ethernet cables?
Before slagging off AudioQuest, have you actually tried the Ethernet cables?
+1, and their USB cables
Its spelled SNAIC Oil.... The only well is in Salisbury, England.
In my case, I have Lavender (or Grey) interconnects, Black SNAIC's and NAC A4. I have some Grey SNAIC's too, I will certainly not be looking at Super Lumina...
So, I'm converted. Apologies, this is probably old news to many on this forum but for me it was a revelation.


On my old system i was using a well known brands £220.00 per m cable. I used this on my naim kit until a room change-around neccessitated a longer run.
I tried some naca5 & found i prefered it. The other cable seemed to me to change/colour the sound wheras the naca5 sounds like it just lets the amp & speakers do the job (if that makes sense?!).
I shall stick with the naca5.
Before slagging off AudioQuest, have you actually tried the Ethernet cables?
Certainly in the analog domain, electrical characteristics of cable can impact the quality of sound - although this is often more that they are good electrical matches than perform any special magic. NACA 5 works so well with NAIM because it specifically is matched to complement the amps
However, special ethernet cables are pure hocus-pocus. I have not tried their Ethernet cables. I have 20 years of experience in engineering in the High-Perfromance Computing space and have spent way too many hours on cable testing, certification as well as design of systems revolving around ethernet and using the most time precise tools and PTP calibration for metrics. These cables show such a fundamental misrepresentation and misunderstanding of how A. Ethernet and how it operates within the OSI model B. How DLNA/UPnP playback and Digital to Analog conversion happens and C. What actually happens at the Ethernet PHY layer. The actually most intellectually insulting part of these cables are the alleged directionality - DLNA uses TCP for content, definition, control and eventing, which is bi-directional by nature.
I am sure you can find someone who's confirmation bias completely defy's their sense of reason to imagine something happening in a cable that short however nothing in that cable is going to make one iota of improvement in your system over a good quality, undamaged cat 6A cable - it is absolute fraud.
Don't sit on the fence Dupree, say what you mean
So no, you've not heard them then and you therefore have no idea what they sound like or if they can indeed affect the sound
Don't sit on the fence Dupree, say what you mean
So no, you've not heard them then and you therefore have no idea what they sound like or if they can indeed affect the sound
I'm with Dupree on this one. How can a digital cable affect sound or picture quality. It is just a conduit of 0s and 1s. Unless data is going missing which would not happen in a non damaged Ethernet cable I can't see it making any difference.
Unless it does. After all, who would have thought that turning a cable one way instead of the other would make such a difference?
For me the hobby is fascinating because of all of the inconvenient facts poking their little thumbs in the eyes of beautiful theories.
Don't sit on the fence Dupree, say what you mean
So no, you've not heard them then and you therefore have no idea what they sound like or if they can indeed affect the sound
A.) They can not affect the sound - The only reason they can sell these is because of the consumer or mark does not understand how networking works, have any understanding of jitter, the PHY layer and how digital/analog conversion works. It also overlooks that you are plugging these into a cheap netgear or other switch that is the intermediary between the player and the NAS anyway which with it's noisy switch-mode power supply etc could possibly cause interference in the analog domain.
B.) I would be glad to see the results a group, including myself do a double blind test with a couple of different Cat 6 cables and this fraud-cake and see if anyone can reliably tell any difference much less which is better. Everyone is scared of testing things double blind because there is a great desire to allow for confirmation BIAS to justify the expense of paying more.
I'm pleased to see B). I've had lots of discussion with peopple who have told me that different cables, speaker, interconnects, digital, can't affect the sound and my experience and ears, and that of friends and family, tells me that they clearly can. I don't know if ethernet cables can impact on sound, although I see no reason why they can't carry noise etc, but until I hear myself I will avoid catagorically stating that they can't. After all, I saw quite a few bumble bees in summer that can't poossibly fly
Sorry for kicking off another cable thread... as if the topic hasn't already been discussed to death on forums since the birth of the internet.
I must say though, when it comes to cables and digital signals I'm still firmly in the non-believer camp.
What about mains cables ? Something i can't get my head around when people pay silly money for.
I must say though, when it comes to cables and digital signals I'm still firmly in the non-believer camp.
Well, maybe you should give it a try. After all, you discovered that you liked a cable costing 5 times as much already.
No harm in experimenting.
This thread promises much!!
But very likely will deliver little. A bit like sex after too much wine.
It would be interesting if a double blind test could be set up, however I do admit to being an Ethernet cable sceptic. ...... Why?
1/. I spent an evening with a friends Linn system listening to/for differences between freebie Cat5, Supra Cat7 & AQ Cinnamon; we all heard a change from Cat5 to the others & in retrospect I suspect it was damaged in some way, apart from speculative & maybe because of intense listening we could not reliably detect any SQ differences between Supra & AQ. As a result of this test I bought Supra.
2/. If there was real SQ changes I would have expected the press to be busy with group testing & whatever else they do that sells magazine copy. Apart from the obviously sponsored "tests" that AQ have done, I suspect the rest of the press are reluctant to get involved for fear of a boring non-result.
3/. The Ethernet carries a data stream that is sent & verified as part of the communication between renderer & server & if it's incomplete it gets resent & again verified. Then that data is stored in the renderer buffer along with the previous & following data packets. The data (music) is played from the buffer, not from the NAS or the cable.
I3/. The Ethernet carries a data stream that is sent & verified as part of the communication between renderer & server & if it's incomplete it gets resent & again verified. Then that data is stored in the renderer buffer along with the previous & following data packets. The data (music) is played from the buffer, not from the NAS or the cable.
There is, by the way, no $10,000 Ethernet cable among AudioQuests regular offerings. The Diamond tops out at $7,998 for a 12m cable.
I have no doubt that the would customize a longer one that would break the $10k-mark, but please remember Naims entry-level NACA5 speaker cable starts at prices above $10,000 (for any pair above 230 feet
).
That's all well and good, but AQ Cinnamon still sounds better than a bog standard cable. My ears tell me this, not physics, electronics or whatever. So clearly I must be stupid, deaf, deluded, a liar, some of these, or all of them. Anyway, I'm not going to argue with someone with a closed mind, as there is just no point.