For RLC measurements, see Audioholics, esp. the cable faceoffs listed on this page:
http://www.audioholics.com/techtips/audioprinciples/index.php
"Straight wire without gain" is an ideal, not a real-world phenomenon. All wire will have some tiny effect on frequency response, most commonly a little roll-off in the top octave. And when I say a little, I mean generally well below what humans can detect. There are exceptions, and it's certainly possible to intentionally make a cable with really bad FR. But for most speaker-amp combinations, any cable with reasonably low resistance (meaning reasonably thick) will provide audibly flat frequency response.
Which is why cable purveyors don't publish FR plots--because they'd show something the purveyors don't want you to know.
http://www.audioholics.com/techtips/audioprinciples/index.php
"Straight wire without gain" is an ideal, not a real-world phenomenon. All wire will have some tiny effect on frequency response, most commonly a little roll-off in the top octave. And when I say a little, I mean generally well below what humans can detect. There are exceptions, and it's certainly possible to intentionally make a cable with really bad FR. But for most speaker-amp combinations, any cable with reasonably low resistance (meaning reasonably thick) will provide audibly flat frequency response.
Which is why cable purveyors don't publish FR plots--because they'd show something the purveyors don't want you to know.