There has been a fairly recent influx of cable, mid to high end, for sale on eBay from sellers in China. This seemed dubious to me, just, well, because we know that one thing China does very well is copy/fake stuff like earphones, toothbrush heads, razor blades, ipods, memory cards etc..
Anyway, I bought the following cable:
http://cgi.ebay.co.uk/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=270493342822&ssPageName=STRK:MEWAX:IT
I'm not one usually 'suckered' in to buying this kind of thing, but at £22 for 'pure silver' cables, I thought I'd give it a shot (I'm not a complete cable skeptic, just have a line drawn at about £20 for phono leads, whether used, home made or new off-the-shelf). You will notice that the cable auction mentions the words 'pure silver'. I can assure you that there is nothing pure silver about these interconnects whatsoever.
The picture below shows the cable as I received it:
The next picture shows the phono plug casing unscrewed, and a load of hot melt glue plastered over the inside of body of the plug. Hiding something? The hot melt glue seems to be acting as the anchor for the plug to the cable. Quality.
After hacking at the glue for a couple of minutes, I exposed the conductors. After reasonably carefully paring away the rather hard red insulation material, I found that the cable was not silver at all. Not even plated, but plain copper. There is a single center conductor and a braided screen which is connected to ground.
The picture below shows the copper conductor:
The black overbraid is held on the ends of the cable with what appears to be green insulation tape.
What the above has to do with fake cables apart from the fact there is no pure silver (apart from possibly the plug plating), is that there is a manufacturer's branding on the cable itself. I couldn't get a good enough picture to show, but on the maroon outer jacket is printed 'Van Den HUL M. C. D 102 MK III Hybrid >Halogen free<', in gold writing.
This is clearly wrong, as there is no carbon conducting material in the cable at all (as there would be in the genuine cable), and the outer jacket is the wrong colour (maroon vs. mustard yellow of the genuine cable).
DON'T buy 'hifi' cables from China!
£22 down the pan!
Anyway, I bought the following cable:
http://cgi.ebay.co.uk/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=270493342822&ssPageName=STRK:MEWAX:IT
I'm not one usually 'suckered' in to buying this kind of thing, but at £22 for 'pure silver' cables, I thought I'd give it a shot (I'm not a complete cable skeptic, just have a line drawn at about £20 for phono leads, whether used, home made or new off-the-shelf). You will notice that the cable auction mentions the words 'pure silver'. I can assure you that there is nothing pure silver about these interconnects whatsoever.
The picture below shows the cable as I received it:

The next picture shows the phono plug casing unscrewed, and a load of hot melt glue plastered over the inside of body of the plug. Hiding something? The hot melt glue seems to be acting as the anchor for the plug to the cable. Quality.

After hacking at the glue for a couple of minutes, I exposed the conductors. After reasonably carefully paring away the rather hard red insulation material, I found that the cable was not silver at all. Not even plated, but plain copper. There is a single center conductor and a braided screen which is connected to ground.
The picture below shows the copper conductor:

The black overbraid is held on the ends of the cable with what appears to be green insulation tape.
What the above has to do with fake cables apart from the fact there is no pure silver (apart from possibly the plug plating), is that there is a manufacturer's branding on the cable itself. I couldn't get a good enough picture to show, but on the maroon outer jacket is printed 'Van Den HUL M. C. D 102 MK III Hybrid >Halogen free<', in gold writing.
This is clearly wrong, as there is no carbon conducting material in the cable at all (as there would be in the genuine cable), and the outer jacket is the wrong colour (maroon vs. mustard yellow of the genuine cable).
DON'T buy 'hifi' cables from China!
£22 down the pan!
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