2012/02/07

Fender Performance Inspired Audio Cables


These Kink-Free Cords Deliver Transparent Sound and Sport a Vintage Look



$32.00 MSRP, $27.99 Street
www.fender.com
By Jon Chappell



Though there are legions of golden-eared tonemeisters who scrutinize every element in their signal chain, most guitarists don’t give that much thought to their cables. They skip right from their instrument’s output jack to the amp or the first effect in the signal chain. But cables are an essential part of your setup, not only for sound but for the way you perform and handle them. After all, you don’t move your pedals and amps around with you as you play, but your cable has to go where you go. Next to your instrument, the cable is the closest signal chain component to your body.

Fender cares a lot about cables and has released the Performance Inspired Audio Cable series, which focuses both on and audio as well as user-friendliness. This series includes many different types of cables for all your audio needs. There are instrument, microphone, and speaker cables, all in various lengths, with different connectors and gauges, where appropriate. Let’s look at some common elements in the Performance Inspired series before checking out the specific cables themselves.

NO BAD MEMORIES HERE


All Inspired Performance audio cables share an important quality musicians will appreciate right away: their lack of “physical memory,” an undesirable trait where cables tend to coil back into their previously wrapped
state. This also makes them more prone to kinking—putting stress not only on the insulation but the wire core.

But Fender Inspired cables won’t kink and don’t suffer from memory retention. You notice this while still in the packaging. For example, the instrument cable comes coiled in about nine wraps. This put an 18.6" foot cable into a circular shape of about nine inches in diameter. But when removed from its packaging, the cable unrolled into a virtual straight line. Try as I might, I couldn’t reproduce the original diameter with any predictable degree of accuracy because there was no previous shape to go by—a complete lack of physical memory! All cables wrap easily at the end of a gig, and conform completely to your storage dimensions, whatever they may be.

COLORLESS SOUND—THAT'S A GOOD THING


The other important element in a cable, of course, is its sound—or rather, its lack of contribution to the sound. Plenty of cables will color the sound, and some are even proud of this effect. Not here. You don’t hear any difference in your tone as the result of using these instrument cables, whether you’re using full-length ones or the shorter patch cables to connect between effects pedals. These are transparent as can be. What you put in is what you get out.

I put all three types—instrument, mic, and speaker—to the test, listening closely for high-end drop-off. No aspect of my sound lost any of the clarity or drop in frequency response from the original signal. This is true of the speaker cables in either gauge: 16 AWG as well as the heavier-duty 14 AWG.

CABLE CONSTRUCTION


Cables don’t have moving parts or a view to their inner workings (unless they accidentally get sliced open by a lawn mower—don’t ask me how I know this), so it helps to know just what’s behind some of the components. The instrument cables feature a two-conductor 1/4" commercial-grade plug on each end, custom designed by Fender specifically for the Inspired series. Nickel-plated steel barrels and shafts accommodate Fender’s uniquely thick-diameter cable, and will withstand years of heavy use. Silver contacts and solder provide quiet and reliable connections. A nickel-plated zinc crimp-style strain relief and PVC shrink tube encase the connector and provide additional reinforcement.

For the XLR (microphone) cables, a custom-designed connecter was used to accommodate Fender’s new larger-diameter cables here as well. Finished in black, the nickel-steel housing and silver contacts yield quiet and reliable connections. Black PVC strain reliefs also provide additional reinforcement.

For their speaker cable connectors, Fender went with a best-of-breed choice: the ubiquitous Speakon. Speakons are the industry standard for amp-to-loudspeaker connections and are designed to operate in the high-current inductive-load environment of loudspeakers. Fender’s speaker cables feature a robust plastic housing, traditional Neutrik chuck-type cable clamp, touch-proof contacts, and a unique locking mechanism for extra security (great for those long runs and outdoor gigs!). As mentioned, they come in either 16 AWG or 14 AWG.

CABLE-READY


A cable should be a lot like plumbing: when doing its job, the result should be completely invisible to the user. Not only were all three cables completely neutral with respect to a sonic signature, the mic and instrument cables didn’t resist me in any way during my various stage movements. Their suppleness assured me complete free reign in walking and turning, never kinking or coiling in the slightest. The instrument cables even look great, too: white jacket-wrapped ends pays tribute to the vintage Fender look, especially if you’re playing a black-and-white Strat—Eric Clapton’s Blackie, anyone? Fender’s Custom Shop also offers tweed versions. The construction is identical, but the tweed fabric is just a little more high-end in the aesthetics department, especially if you like the look or Fender vintage amps and instruments cases.

But whether you go high-end or opt for the working musician’s version, Fender’s Performance Inspired audio cables ensure you always sound your best and that you don’t neglect the all-important link between your music-making gear.


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