I believe there ARE cable manufacturers who are creating products of value, even at the high prices. Some are using materials that are outrageously expensive, and designing from an obsessive and exhaustive point of view. I appreciate cables to be on equal footing to individual components. I just wish there was more scrutiny at these costs, because it does a disservice to those who are really trying. It also leads to a sense of cynicism and generalization that is hard to shake.
I do know a bit about what is in my cables and conditioner. It's not tinned copper wire from the hardware store...
The notion of value is extremely subjective. I will grant you that but even with that notion being vague, it is very but very difficult to attach value with cables especially when you add "even at high prices" ... Trying very hard not to invoke any contentious protocols, the contribution brought by those cables is at best , subtle. For the vast majority of their owners (I would say all but it is a new year so I am being nice
) it is very hard to reliably perceive the diferences between their expensive cables and other electrically adequate cables ... Yet they continue to cost more than the proverbial mid-size sedan, a few (vide the $42,000 speaker cable, venturing into luxury mid-size sedan price category ...
I also would like to know the "outrageously expensive" material such cables use.. Let's suppose they use pure Silver .. Very expensive metal, one would say, Well 12 GA silver wire cost ,
retails, $12 per foot... Assuming a cable made of four strand of 12 Ga silver to make it the equivalent of a 6 AWG cable(I don't know of ANY audiophile Silver cable currently on the market that thick) for an 8-ft cable pair you are talking about less than $1000 of silver in said cable,Let me assume generously $3,0000 for manufactures and dressing-up (sheath, cable cover connectors, etc) and I am still gasping to explain the $30,000 some cable sell for None of these close to 6 AWG
I would add that any manufacturer has to understand the pulse of its market. There is no need to antagonize a market . The Audiophile market is inits vast majority (is that changing?) believes in cables.. A manufacturer who sounds too contrarian or who try too much to debunk some myths is often ostracized by its very market (John Dunleavy for example) and its market share decreases .. Heck some products are deemed too inexpensive to be good (Evolution Acoustics MM3 for example is neverperceived as the superlative worldclass speaker it truly is).. So components designers/maanufacturers will obey the laws of basic marketing and claim all nice things about cables and say how changing the cables inside their speakers made a "day and night" difference ...
Cynicism? No .. Realism .. Cables in high End .... The conclusion is all yours people.. I think you can infer mine from the preceeding