When a cable maker rolls out not one model but three closely related designs at once, the conversation is almost always about metallurgy. That’s exactly the case with Kimber Kable’s new NEO interconnect family: a shared engineering philosophy, executed through three different conductors for different tastes and systems.
The lineup splits into Neo-AG, Neo-HB and Neo-CU, and the suffixes do the talking. AG means silver, CU means copper, and HB is the hybrid. All the metals on offer are claimed to be highest-purity materials, which is the whole point of buying into a range like this in the first place.
Construction follows a single underlying approach, with meaningful variations between the three:
- Neo-AG (silver) — four solid-core and braided conductors.
- Neo-CU (copper) — the same scheme: four solid-core and braided conductors.
- Neo-HB (hybrid) — a more elaborate geometry, with 8 silver signal conductors wrapped by 8 braided conductors for ground and shielding.
The logic reads clearly. Neo-AG is built on silver, Neo-CU on copper. Neo-HB, meanwhile, proposes a genuinely different topology: silver signal cores given a developed system of braided grounding and shielding, in that tidy “eight-on-eight” arrangement.
It’s worth dwelling on those braided conductors, because they’re doing real work here. They handle the low-level signal travelling between source and amplifier, and a low-level signal is precisely where geometry matters most — stray noise and poor shielding show up far more readily than they would on a beefy speaker run. That’s why, in every one of the three NEO models, the conductor layout is engineered with as much care as the choice of metal itself. The braiding isn’t decorative; it’s part of how the cable manages interference and keeps the signal clean on its way to the amp.
So what does the listener actually walk away with? In practice, three instruments for fine-tuning a signal chain rather than three versions of the same thing. Neo-CU leans on copper, traditionally the warmer, more forgiving route. Neo-AG goes all-in on silver, the choice for those chasing detail and speed. And Neo-HB is aimed at anyone who wants silver signal cores but with that more developed shielding structure backing them up — a middle path that refuses to compromise on either ingredient.
It’s a neat way to package a single design idea: pick your conductor, keep the engineering. Whether silver, copper or hybrid suits your room and your gear is the kind of question that only a long evening of listening can answer — but Kimber Kable has at least made sure the answer comes in three flavors.