Lionel
Very good cable, nothing to do with standard cables.
Comment from December 23, 2025 — Experience from December 08, 2025
At a time when the HDMI 2.1 standard is becoming the norm in home theater and gaming setups, AudioQuest is offering the Forest 48, an Ultra High Speed certified cable that incorporates the brand’s proprietary noise-dissipation technologies. This model occupies the second rung in the American manufacturer’s 48 Gbps range, just above the Pearl 48, and marks the entry point into silver-plated conductor cables.
The Forest 48 uses solid LGC (Long-Grain Copper) conductors coated with a layer of silver representing 0.5% of the total thickness. This plating technique is not incidental: in a high-frequency digital cable, the signal travels mainly on the surface of the conductor due to a phenomenon known as the skin effect. Placing silver, which conducts better than copper, on this surface optimizes transmission without requiring a cable made entirely of solid silver.
The choice of solid rather than stranded conductors eliminates the electrical and magnetic interactions between the different strands that would otherwise make up the conductor. AudioQuest applies this same treatment to the conductors dedicated to eARC (Enhanced Audio Return Channel), which is not always the case with other manufacturers who sometimes reserve their best materials only for the main audio/video pairs.
AudioQuest structures its noise-dissipation technology into several levels. The Forest 48 benefits from level 1, which is based on directional control of the cable’s 19 conductors. The principle starts from an observation: traditional shields, even those advertised as 100%, struggle to protect against radio frequency interference generated by Wi-Fi networks, Bluetooth, and mobile phones.
The granular structure of drawn metal exhibits an asymmetry that creates a preferential direction for draining noise. By controlling this orientation across all A/V pairs, eARC pairs, control and power conductors, AudioQuest directs captured interference towards the least sensitive circuits. Arrows on the connectors indicate the installation direction, from the source to the screen or amplifier.
Ultra High Speed certification guarantees a bandwidth of 48 Gbps, made possible by four balanced audio/video pairs, each capable of carrying 12 Gbps. This capacity enables the transmission of 4K at 120 frames per second, 8K at 60 frames per second, and even 10K at 30 frames per second over the shortest lengths.
The Forest 48 supports dynamic HDR in its various forms (HDR10+, Dolby Vision) and eARC, which allows uncompressed audio streams such as Dolby TrueHD, Dolby Atmos, DTS-HD Master Audio, or DTS:X to be sent from a TV to an amplifier or soundbar. Previous generations of ARC were limited to compressed 5.1-channel audio; eARC removes this restriction.
The gaming features of the HDMI 2.1 standard are all present: VRR (Variable Refresh Rate) to synchronize the screen’s refresh rate with the source, ALLM (Auto Low Latency Mode) to automatically activate the TV’s game mode, and QFT (Quick Frame Transport) to reduce latency in fast-paced action scenes. These features fully exploit the potential of the PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X, and recent graphics cards.
The black PVC jacket with green stripes gives the cable greater rigidity than typical consumer cables, which can make routing through tight spaces more difficult but ensures good impedance stability over the entire length. The Type A connectors are carefully assembled and feature the directional arrows characteristic of AudioQuest cables.
For an ARC link between TV and soundbar, the cable must point towards the TV on both ends: the ARC conductors are internally wired to work in the opposite direction of the main A/V pairs. This particularity is documented by AudioQuest but is worth recalling at installation time.
Yes, all AudioQuest 48 Gbps HDMI cables are backward compatible with earlier standards. You can use them with HDMI 2.0, 1.4, or even older equipment without any operational issues.
These arrows indicate the optimal installation direction for noise dissipation. The cable must be connected so that the arrows point from the source (player, console, set-top box) to the destination (TV, amplifier). For an ARC connection to a soundbar, the arrows should point towards the TV, even on the soundbar side.
The Cinnamon 48 uses a thicker silver plating (1.25% versus 0.5%) and benefits from optimized polyethylene insulation. According to AudioQuest, the difference is mainly audible on the audio side, with more precise transmission of high-resolution streams via eARC.
Yes, thanks to eARC and the 48 Gbps bandwidth, the cable can carry Dolby Atmos, DTS:X, and other uncompressed high-resolution audio formats, provided that both your source and receiving devices are also eARC compatible.
Lionel
Very good cable, nothing to do with standard cables.
Comment from December 23, 2025 — Experience from December 08, 2025
Christian
Perfect for my Panasonic Blu-ray player
Great quality
Comment from November 29, 2025 — Experience from November 01, 2025
Florent
Fairly flexible and practical cable.
The image quality is very good. Of course, it's not on the same level as higher-end cables from Audioquest, but it's a very good entry-level option and does the job very well, whether for image or sound.
In my opinion, not suitable for TVs over 55 inches in terms of length.
Comment from January 20, 2025 — Experience from November 28, 2024