Gold analog cables is certainly better than their cheaper counterpart because the connector is less likely to corrode and would maintain perfect contact after repeated connect/disconnect cycles. Gold HDMI cables however is complete scam.
Especially gold plated like in the meme. Solid gold isn’t really worth it, but gold plated means a thin layer of gold at the point of contact. Less corrosion at the point of contact, a better electrical connection, fewer sound issues.
The problem is when they start selling digital cables that cost 10x as much and use exotic materials. First of all, digital has error compensation built into the protocols so even if one bit gets flipped occasionally, the numbers still add up and exactly the same data gets through. Second, as long as the cable follows the standard (say HDMI) even the cheapest cable will be indistinguishable from a really expensive one.
Meh, copper is reasonably corrosion resistant and is a slightly better conductor.
The reality is that gold plated cables are typically just better built. Most cables fail due to strain points so having good gauge, soldered connections, strain relief and good thich jacketing is really more important than metallurgy
Gold analog cables is certainly better than their cheaper counterpart because the connector is less likely to corrode and would maintain perfect contact after repeated connect/disconnect cycles. Gold HDMI cables however is complete scam.
The thing is: For most people and situations cables never corrode so badly that somebody would hear any difference.
Especially gold plated like in the meme. Solid gold isn’t really worth it, but gold plated means a thin layer of gold at the point of contact. Less corrosion at the point of contact, a better electrical connection, fewer sound issues.
The problem is when they start selling digital cables that cost 10x as much and use exotic materials. First of all, digital has error compensation built into the protocols so even if one bit gets flipped occasionally, the numbers still add up and exactly the same data gets through. Second, as long as the cable follows the standard (say HDMI) even the cheapest cable will be indistinguishable from a really expensive one.
Meh, copper is reasonably corrosion resistant and is a slightly better conductor.
The reality is that gold plated cables are typically just better built. Most cables fail due to strain points so having good gauge, soldered connections, strain relief and good thich jacketing is really more important than metallurgy