🎶 Elevate Your Sound Experience!
The Mediabridge™ Ultra Series Subwoofer Cable is a 6-foot, dual shielded cable featuring gold plated RCA connectors, designed to connect subwoofer speakers to audio components while delivering exceptional bass response and flexibility.
V**N
Mediabridge is the perfect price vs value crossover point to not over spend....
I like Mediabridge products. Quality feel and function, no cheap feel, nice ends, yet doesn't break the bank. Their banana plug ends are sweet!!! Cables fully functional and I have no complaints, in this price range, or the sonic capacity of their hooks in this price range.Yes, to a point of diminishing return, better cables/hooks can allow the transfer of better signals but you spend mightily for that small incremental increase in realized, audible audio improvement. I have some of those hooks and they sound good. But they cannot make the sound BETTER than the source. Mine are hooked to $10,000 McIntosh components, and no the Mediabridge cannot compare. But you can afford the Mediabridge and still have quality likely higher than the big box stores sell that claim to be Best.Best I can tell they use all copper wire. This is good cause some don't, including some speaker wire so beware. You don't want that stuff. Higher impedance and greater signal loss. No thanks. Real copper and OFC is the only way to go. (Unless you can afford silver wire.)You think you can hear a BIG difference between $300 hooks compared to these, and have the disposable cash, then buy those. Be happy. Sleep good. Some CAN hear the difference, me one of them. A lot depends on your speakers there, too. :)Want to transfer a quality signal on a budget, try Mediabridge products. This is their niche. I like em and my main system is McIntosh. I use different cables for that, but the cost is waaaaaaay different.
R**R
Excellent Quality Cable at Extremely Low Cost!!!
I have 4 Definitive BP7002, 2 for my mains and 2 for my rears, with each containing built-in 300 Watt powered subwoofers. I already had my main speakers' LFE inputs connected to my subwoofer output (using a splitter) on my preamp using Monster M1000 cables. These cables cost me around $150/each for around 10 feet of cable but they have delivered excellent bass performance! I recently purchased a new preamp that contains 2 subwoofer outputs so I decided to buy another splitter in order to connect all four subwoofers. But I didn't want to pay hundreds of dollars for Monster subwoofer cable. Additionally, my rear speakers would require approximately 50 feet of cable. At first I was skeptical of the Mediabridge Ultra Series Dual Shielded Subwoofer Cables. They seemed too good to be true. After reading several reviews on the internet I decided to order 2 of the 50' Ultra Series Dual Shielded Subwoofer Cables for my home theater. I did have a problem with the shipment since one of the cables was the wrong cable. The label on the outside was correct but the actual cable was wrong. Not sure if this was Amazon's or Mediabridge's fault. Regardless, the correct cable was eventually delivered and I was able to connect them to my home theater. The cable quality is excellent! The connectors are well made and the cable is heavy duty. So far the sound is amazing! I honestly can't tell a difference between the bass response in my rear subwoofers versus my main subwoofers. Again, the only difference between my mains and rears is the subwoofer cable.NOTE, I think that "Shawn's" review is for Mediabridge's RG6 Series cable and not the Ultra Series Dual Shielded cable that I purchased. The Ultra Series cables have a purple stripe on the connector head and the RG6 Series cables have a green stripe around the connector head. I'm sure the RG6 cable is excellent as well but I prefer the more flexible Ultra Series cable. To see images of both cables, go to the main image on Amazon and click on the small photo underneath on the far right. This image will open and you can click on 2 more images to see the differences. The example shows only a 25' Ultra Series cable but I bought the 50' version. The problem is Amazon is selling both of these cables (RG6 and Ultra) and have the exact same header describing each cable. THEY ARE NOT THE SAME CABLE!!! Buy the cable with the purple stripe on the connector head.Overall, these cables are amazing regardless of cost! But the fact that they have a list price of $30 is incredible! And then Amazon is selling them for cheaper than that....WHAT?!?!?!?! Definitely buy these cables!**** UPDATE ****December 2012It has now been 1.5 years since my initial review and I just wanted to provide an update. I still love my Ultra Series Dual Shielded subwoofer cables! The low frequency response is as good as my much more expensive Monster subwoofer cables that I have for my front subwoofers.
G**L
Inexpensive, but not cheaply made. Great subwoofer cable.
It's a basic subwoofer cable. It's exactly as described, so far as I can see by visual inspection (I didn't cut it open to check the various layers) and looks exactly like the pictures.Some things to note:- The cable is very thick due to the two layers of shielding, the outer layer being copper and the inner layer aluminum. Combine this with the PVC cover, and it's a very sturdy cable. There is a cost to this in that it isn't highly flexible. You aren't going to be getting 90 degree turns from this, so plan accordingly.- The build quality of the connectors is excellent. A basic RCA connector has a single pin in the middle and four fins in a circle around the edge. The Mediabridge cable improves on this basic design in a couple of important ways. First, the center pin has been split down the middle. Why would this matter? It's because with the pin split, the two sides compress when the cable is inserted, creating active pressure on the inside of the port. The outer portion is also a single piece that has been cut into eight angled fins and is significantly thicker than a cheap basic cable. This makes for a stronger grip on the outer surface of the port and reduces the effect of the connector losing grip strength over time. This results in the connector putting pressure onto the port both from the inside and outside, in effect squeezing it from both sides, as opposed to a basic cable that grips from the exterior only. It does make insertion require a bit more force, but the result is a connection that is unlikely to vibrate out of the subwoofer port.- It's gold plated. Gold is the second best metal conductor of electricity (after silver), about even with copper. Gold plating is used on connectors because it's an excellent conductor, and more corrosion resistant than silver or copper. The conductivity is actually the less important aspect here, as the steel that is being coated with gold would be perfectly adequate to provide a connection. The cable is carrying information, not power (like speaker wire) so there's no practicable difference between an adequate connection and a perfect one. The corrosion resistance is the important part - gold plated connectors don't rust like steel or tarnish like copper, both of which lower the conductivity over time. Zinc would also work for corrosion resistance, but it's less conductive than gold is. In short, anything more conductive would corrode with time, and anything with the same corrosion resistance isn't as good a conductor. Gold can also be applied in a very thin coat and still retain the corrosion resistance property, making it economical as well.- It's double insulated and magnetically shielded. As the pictures show, there are five layers to this cable. The part carrying the signal is a relatively thin copper strand in the middle. Unlike with speaker wire, thicker isn't better because the cable is carrying information, not conducting power, which is supplied by the subwoofer, so you don't need a very thick cable. That strand is covered with a layer of foam dialectric insulation, followed by an aluminum mylar sheath, a copper sheath, and finally the PVC outer cover. The copper sheath provides magnetic shielding from the large magnet in the sub, the fields produced by the receiver, static electricity, and any signals the cable might otherwise pick up from the environment. All of these are picked up by the copper sheath, preventing them from getting to the cable carrying the signal. This shielding effectively creates a faraday cage for your entire cable. The alumnum mylar layer inside of that is highly reflective of any sort of electromagnetic radiation, which includes radio waves, heat, and all of those signals sent out by remotes and other wireless devices. The dialectric foam insulates the aluminum and copper layers from the inner, signal carrying copper strand. The effect is that you have a layer of physical insulation, magnetic insulation, electromagnetic insulation, and another layer of physical magnetic insulation. This cable will not transfer or pick up any signal other than the one coming from your receiver.It's overkill in the protection department, four layers of protection, probably more than most people would ever need, but it's only $10 for the 15 foot cable, so it's not like you're throwing away money on protection you don't need. It's better to have it and not need it than the other way around.The packaging was excellent, a simple cardboard box with a coiled cable inside. Easier to open and better protection from damage is a win-win over plastic clamshells.My only regret is that I ordered a 15 foot cable when 8 feet would have been enough.Hooking it up is a snap - plug one end (it doesn't matter which one) into the subwoofer out on the receiver (a Denon AVR S700W 7.2 network receiver), plug the other into the LFE input on the subwoofer LFE input, making sure both are well seated, and you're done. You can also use the left input if your sub doesn't have a dedicated LFE input and get the same effect. I believe Mediabridge also sells a similar cable with a Y splitter for those with right and left inputs as well, but LFE out to the left input works for most subwoofers just fine.
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