pannayar
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Can different cables make a sound quality difference?
From basic physics, I assume thinner cables should have more resistance (ohms), hence harder to drive and hence should produce lower sound volume (dB)?
So between a thick and thin cable, only the sound volume level should be different or the sound quality itself can be different?
For sound quality to be different, I assume the transmission properties of the cable itself must be different (for various frequencies), correct?
Is it correct to say / assume that any such above differences (resistance or transmission characteristics) will be small enough across various cables that it really does not make that much of an audible difference, especially in the sound quality (frequency response) and not the sound level?
From basic physics, I assume thinner cables should have more resistance (ohms), hence harder to drive and hence should produce lower sound volume (dB)?
So between a thick and thin cable, only the sound volume level should be different or the sound quality itself can be different?
For sound quality to be different, I assume the transmission properties of the cable itself must be different (for various frequencies), correct?
Is it correct to say / assume that any such above differences (resistance or transmission characteristics) will be small enough across various cables that it really does not make that much of an audible difference, especially in the sound quality (frequency response) and not the sound level?