czwartek, 26 września 2013

Monoprice vs. Bandridge

Here's a comparison of two, probably the most common HDMI cables on the market. I've tried both of them and I have mixed feelings. Their popularity only keeps me thinking that people do not focus on quality of things they buy. Let me remind you. This is monoprice:

Monoprice worth 2$ and its cable looking like it's going to break tomorrow. Of course you may say: I am only going to keep it plugged in. There's a chance it will work. What producer says:

Connector Type HDMI® male to HDMI® male
Connector Finish Gold
Length 1.5 ft
Gauge 28 AWG
Number of Conductors 19
Conductor Plating Tin
Shielding Level Triple
Shielding Type EMI
Ferrite Cores Yes
HDMI® Connector Head Size 20 x 11 x 37 mm
HDMI® Connector Diameter 8 mm
Net Jacket No
Built-in Equalizer No
Supported Resolutions 480i to 4k
 
Bandwidth up to 340 MHz per channel (1.02 GHz total)
Data Throughput up to 3.4 Gbps per channel (10.2 Gbps total)
Deep Color 10-bit, 12-bit, and 3x16-bit (48-bit RGB or YCbCr), X.V.Color™
 
HDMI® Certified Yes
Category 2 Certified Yes
HDCP Compliant Yes
CEC Compliant Yes
ROHS Compliant Yes
Supports DVD Audio Yes
Supports SACD Yes
Supports Dolby TrueHD™ & DTS-HD Master Audio™ Yes
 
UL File # E119932
UL Style # 20276
CL2 (In-Wall) No
VW-1 Yes
Voltage Rating 30V
Temperature Rating 80° C


[source: monoprice.com]

As you see, you can't demand a lot. Compare this for yourself with bandridge:


Actually these look as cheap as monoprice but are pretty good. Also the key features the producer gives us are more strict:
  • HDMI Cable
  • Connector 1: HDMI Male
  • Connector 2: HDMI Male
  • 1.6 ft Cable Length
  • 24 K Gold Plated Connector Material
  • 100% Oxygen Free Copper Conductor


It sounds good, yes, but it is nothing awesome, to write it shortly. I cannot criticize but if you are about to choose something frome this price level, please go with bandridge rather.

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