Christian
Very good product, perfect for my needs.
Comment from December 10, 2024 — Experience from October 18, 2024
An analog interconnect cable named after London’s Tower Bridge: it is the first step in AudioQuest’s Bridges & Falls series, a range in which the American manufacturer concentrates most of its cabling technologies into a compact and affordable format. The Tower RCA uses the brand’s in-house recipe (solid long-grain copper conductor, low-loss insulation, noise-dissipation shielding) and offers it from 0.60 m up to 20 m for long installations.
Most entry-level cables use stranded OFHC (Oxygen-Free High-Conductivity) copper conductors. The Tower RCA takes a different approach: a solid, single-strand LGC (Long-Grain Copper) conductor. The difference between the two lies in the crystalline structure of the metal. LGC copper has longer grains, which reduces the number of crystal boundaries along the signal path. Each grain boundary acts like a micro-resistance that distorts the signal as it passes through. The fewer there are, the more faithful the transmission remains.
The single-strand design also has a direct consequence. In a stranded conductor, adjacent strands interact with each other under the effect of electromagnetic fields, generating dynamic distortion (the signal is altered differently depending on its amplitude). A solid conductor eliminates this phenomenon. AudioQuest emphasizes one last point: the conductor’s surface quality acts as a guide for internal electric fields and external magnetic fields, hence the benefit of copper with low oxide and impurity content.
Any insulating material placed near a conductor absorbs a fraction of the signal energy, then releases it with a slight time delay. This phenomenon smears transients and reduces dynamic contrast. The Tower RCA uses foamed polyethylene (PE) insulation, a material whose high air content limits this absorption. Polyethylene is a low-loss dielectric with a low-distortion profile, making it suitable for transmitting sensitive analog signals.
Achieving 100% shielding coverage is relatively simple. The real problem lies elsewhere: in traditional shielding, noise energy and radio-frequency interference (RFI) picked up by the shield are drained to the ground of the connected device. This parasitic energy then modulates the reference ground plane, which causes distortion in the audio signal.
AudioQuest’s Metal-Layer Noise-Dissipation System (NDS) works differently. An interposed metal layer absorbs and reflects most of the noise energy before it reaches the layer connected to ground. The shield still performs its barrier function, but without contaminating the device’s ground reference. The concrete result is a lower noise floor, noticeable on low-level passages.
Many unbalanced-termination (RCA) cables use a single path for ground and shielding. The Tower RCA separates these two functions thanks to a so-called asymmetrical double-balanced geometry, designed for unbalanced connections. This separation reduces impedance on the ground path, which promotes richer dynamics and a quieter background.
The Bridges & Falls series groups the left and right channels in a single jacket, with separate positive and negative conductors. This format produces a thin, flexible cable that is easy to install behind furniture or in a rack. One point to check before purchase: the left and right RCA plugs are close together (less than 7.6 cm apart). If your devices’ inputs are spaced farther apart, AudioQuest recommends its Rivers or Elements series, whose plugs are independent.
The Tower RCA’s RCA plugs are assembled by cold welding, a high-pressure process that eliminates any traditional solder. Tin solder, commonly used in connector assembly, introduces an additional alloy into the signal path, a potential source of distortion. The cold process avoids this added material.
The ground shells are stamped rather than machined. This manufacturing technique makes it possible to choose the metal based on its acoustic properties (low distortion) rather than its machinability. The gold plating protects the contacts against oxidation and ensures stable conductivity over time.
All internal conductors are direction-controlled (Direction-Controlled), a practice AudioQuest applies across its entire range to reduce residual RF noise.
The cable is sold individually. Each cable has two male RCA connectors on each side (left channel and right channel in the same jacket). A single cable is enough for a complete stereo connection.
The Tower and the Evergreen share the same conductor type (solid LGC copper) and the same geometry. The Evergreen stands out with a braided fabric jacket and slightly larger-gauge conductors. Performance is similar, with the main difference being aesthetic and mechanical.
Yes. The cable carries an analog line-level or phono-level signal without restriction. For a moving-coil (MC) cartridge delivering a very low signal, the quality of the Tower RCA’s shielding (100% coverage with NDS dissipation) limits interference likely to degrade the signal-to-noise ratio.
The CL3/FT4 standard guarantees a level of fire resistance sufficient for installation inside walls. In standard use (visible cable or in a cable tray), it simply indicates that the jacket is robust and compliant with strict safety criteria.
AudioQuest direction-controls its conductors at the factory (Direction-Controlled) to minimize RF noise. An arrow printed on the jacket indicates the recommended signal direction, from the source to the receiving device.
Christian
Very good product, perfect for my needs.
Comment from December 10, 2024 — Experience from October 18, 2024
Simon
Does the job. The subwoofer becomes even more precise with a good power cable.
Comment from March 11, 2024 — Experience from June 02, 2023
Benoît
Perfect for connecting my amplifier to my subwoofer. Very good cable allowing for hi-fi and home theater use.
Comment from January 26, 2024 — Experience from December 07, 2023