This was posted 5 months 21 days ago, and might be an out-dated deal.

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AmazonBasics High-Speed 4K HDMI Cable, 50 Feet (15.3m) with RedMere $10 + Delivery ($0 with Prime/ $59 Spend) @ Amazon AU

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For someone who requires a long HDMI cable……..

A-Male to A-Male HDMI cable with RedMere technology; supports Ethernet, 3D, 4K video, and Audio Return Channel (ARC)
RedMere chip enables a clear signal over long distances and allows for a thinner, more pliable wire gauge for improved cable flexibility and portability
This is NOT a bi-directional cable, display connector is marked with a monitor logo
Connects Blu-ray players, Fire TV, Apple TV, PS4, PS3, XBox One, Xbox 360, computers, and other HDMI-enabled devices to TVs, displays, A/V receivers, and more
Cable Length: 50 feet (15.3 meters); Backed by AmazonBasics Lifetime warranty

Price History at C CamelCamelCamel.

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closed Comments

    • +4

      This was great, i hope you use it as the opener on your next stand-up set, let us know how it goes!

    • +3

      Huh?

  • +1

    Must be gone now.

  • +6

    4K/30Hz, No thanks

    • +5

      The listing is all over the place, the 10m one is 18gbps so 4k/60

  • 10.6m still available for $9.10. Nearly pulled the trigger but common sense prevailed after I realised I have no use for it

    • +1

      You have no use for it.. yet. Your next impulse bargain buy might need it…

  • -2

    Very bulky with notable girth, quite rigid and woe to him with excess length, a regretful 2021 purchase of the 25 feet (7.6 meters), introduced white noise (it's a thing with an uncompressed, digital signal) in my 800p@60 setup, yet says 4K Video at 60 on product page; but to be fair, my run included a [passive] switch box.

    • White noise isn't a thing with any digital signal regardless of compression.
      It was either there in the source or it wasn't.

      • Not to be confused with a nice Gaussian, and my bad for using white noise to describe the seldom seen phenomenon in the digital domain. Not to say the cable isn't as acting as an antenna and picking up unwanted motion of particles, but probably (I'm not so educated) has more to do with electrical losses over a wire of bad quality or design. Said noise just isn't shotgunned in the familiar CRT snow pattern (or as you would imply, thermal noise captured by an analog to digital sensor and committed to media - I am displaying the PC desktop).

  • -2

    Loss in an uncompressed signal, you may still get a picture, providing the syncing packets / HDMI frame headers / what-have-you is still parse-able - its degraded integrity looks like a speckle of white pixels, the less sparse, the more degradation.

    Compressed format, also may still give you a something to work with, the MPEG transport stream especially favourable over air broadcasts, only there the damage is cascaded presenting upon decoding to produce more macroblocking artifacts, broken vectors and so on - whereas with uncompressed the impact of single bit flipping is less profound but en masse we get a white noise.

    • +1

      It's not technically correct to describe it as white noise. That is more of an analogue thing, where there is random amplitude across a multitude of frequencies, where it makes a difference if the point in time is say 49% or 52% amplitude. With digital being either all on or all off, there really isn't a "range" of frequencies to work with. Random error — sure. Noisy (as in unwanted artifacts degrading the integrity of the image) or snowy — sure. But there is nothing to make it "white" noise. It could quite easily be pink noise by the same definition you are using. Brown noise would result in more low frequencies, so you'd expect to see many more "0"s, represented by black pixels. The opposite — blue noise — would tend towards higher frequencies or "1"s, resulting in a preponderance of white dots. But digitally, it shouldn't be drawing a black dot unless it is exactly equal to 0%, and white unless it is exactly 100%.

  • +4

    had to get fibre hdmi cable for reliability over 5m

    how well would these even work?

  • +2

    Don't waste your time if you're installing this into a wall/ceiling - just get an optical HDMI - they're not super expensive anymore and a billion times more reliable for high bandwidth data requirements (ie 4k/120/8k etc)

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