Digital Coaxial Cable 75 ohms choices


Hi, Can someone recommend a fairly priced, good performance digital cable (rca to rca) for connection with my Altis CD Transport to my Forsell D/A Convertor. Some of my choices are: Illuminati D60, Ensembled DigiFlux, Transparent Premium Digital Cable. Perhaps someone can give me other ideas.
ferdinand
Try the Harmonic Technology Cyberlink series:(copper,silver platinum). Don't fall for the hype or counter hype. They are excellent, but as usual you should try them in your system for synergy. Most on-line dealers will work out a trial for you. My Cyberlink Platinum sounds like a window into the recording session.
I run a $4300 digital transport and DAC front end and ya know, I use the $50/meter Canare Digiflex Gold I 75 ohm coax between the two with not a smidgen of a want to change cables. So there you have it, a cheap cable that rivals and matches many expensive ones. I've used Kimber too which is no better than the Canare! Try it. For $50, it is a drop in the bucket if you don't like it.
Hi Timo. Just shows how very system dependent digital coax can be. In my system (Theta Data III and GenVa) the Canare sounded pleasantly warm, but muffled and dynamically constrained compared with the Kimber 2020.
Tried the Canare (rca), Transparent Premium Coaxial (rca), Purist Audio Proteus (balanced), and the Tranpsarent Music link digital (balanced). The best of them is the Purist Audio Proteus used in balanced with the Forsell D/A and the Sonic Frontiers SFT-1 transport. My problem now is to find a SFT-1 since the one I'm using is borrowed from a friend.
My tests with digital coax provided much the same results as posted by Ferdinand. The Purist was the winner in every test, and I had both the RCA and balanced versions. The tests between the two versions of the Purist resulted in the single ended edging out the balanced. That result could easily reverse, even with the same two pieces of Purist, auditioned in another high end system. In response to Timo, I have to agree with Redkiwi on the Canare. I understand the desire for inexpensive digital coax, but if you must go that route, try the (professional) Belden precision video cable, version 5881. It is only $1.00 a foot and beats the Canare and even some of the brand name wire. The other factor here on do it yourself coax is the quality of the connector, the type and brand of solder and the quality of your assembly. It can literally reverse the results between two wires!