My pet theory for speaker cable audibility is that audiophile solid-state amps are badly designed and not properly tested for stability. Some speaker cables make them give little bursts of parasitic oscillation at certain points on the audio waveform, but with other cables they stay stable. The oscillations cause distortion that is audible, maybe even euphonic to some single-malt-crazed reviewers.
The little output inductor used in traditional solid-state amps isolates the amp from the cable at high frequencies, preventing oscillation. But it seems to be frowned on in audiophile circles. According to my theory, this is because it makes their expensive cables sound the same as the cheap ones!
http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/HFN/Cables3/TakeTheLead.html
The little output inductor used in traditional solid-state amps isolates the amp from the cable at high frequencies, preventing oscillation. But it seems to be frowned on in audiophile circles. According to my theory, this is because it makes their expensive cables sound the same as the cheap ones!
http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/HFN/Cables3/TakeTheLead.html
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