<!--quoteo(post=279697:date=Oct 9 2008, 05:21 PM:name=vezolution)<div class=\'quotetop\'>QUOTE(vezolution @ Oct 9 2008, 05:21 PM) <a href=\"index.php?act=findpost&pid=279697\"><{POST_SNAPBACK}></a></div><div class=\'quotemain\'><!--quotecI can only speak from my own experience. I'm not one to be sold by salespeople at any store.I used cheap cables at first and the picture quality wasn't near what I expected.The Blacks especially and also gradients were very blocky. I bought better cables and no longer have that problem.Maybe the first cables I bought were "too cheap", IDK. But better cables gave me better quality.Again, just my own experience.-Justin<!--QuoteEnd</div><!--QuoteEEndYou are right to a certain extent. Audio cables are affected by a number of things - oxygen content in the copper, quality of the soldering for the connecters, metal type used on the connectors. Best to get mid-range cables. Get the most expensive and you've been mis-sold, get the cheapest and you may be lucky to get a good sound, but on the whole it could be better. Remember, unlike HDMI, analogue cables actually carry an electrical current and so anything that may cause resistance in the cable will affect the quality of the sound/picture.
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