🎉 Elevate Your Entertainment Experience!
This 20 ft HDMI cable is designed for high-speed performance, supporting 4K UHD resolution and 18 Gbps bandwidth. With advanced features like HDR video transmission and a durable construction, it’s perfect for gamers and home theater enthusiasts alike. Backed by a one-year replacement guarantee, this cable ensures a reliable connection for all your devices.
Number of Items | 1 |
Unit Count | 1 Count |
Shape | Round |
Recommended Uses For Product | High Speed |
Data Transfer Rate | 18 Gigabits Per Second |
Number of Pins | 19 |
Connectivity Technology | HDMI |
Gauge | 26.0 |
Additional Features | High Speed |
Connector Gender | Male-to-Male |
Connector Type Used on Cable | HDMI |
Cable Type | HDMI |
Compatible Devices | Monitor |
Outer Material | Nylon |
S**A
Excellent value. Works great
Got this for a ceiling projector. The white is perfect for a bit of camouflage. I was concerned about a 25 foot run but it's working perfectly from my PC to the projector. It seems well made and I expect it to last a long time. I would recommend this cable. Thanks for reading.
M**K
Excellent value for the money
I bought two HDMI cables at the same time, and they were identical except for length: this 35-foot cable and a 40-foot cable. I installed the 40-foot cable in a wall and ceiling, where it connects my bedroom TV to a wall box next to the bed. There, I switch it between a laptop and a DVD player, so I can lay in bed and easily use the laptop on the big screen. This 35-foot cable stays available for when I need it for any number of applications. I recently used it to connect an overhead video camera to a computer monitor, so that I could easily see what I was doing for an animation project. We occasionally take this cable and a DVD player to my elderly neighbor's house to watch a movie. So far, this 35-foot cable has worked perfectly, and its generous length is ideal to reach just about anywhere. The sound and video quality is excellent -- I've used it exclusively at 1080p and have not tried it with 4K.I would definitely buy this cable again. For its reasonable price, it is so convenient to have a really long HDMI cable that you can use in just about any situation. It is good looking, durable, and performs well.
E**C
high-quality,working perfect, HDMI cable hides better than a black cable would
The media could not be loaded. I can’t believe more Evander‘s don’t sell white HDMI cables. Most people‘s walls are white or off-white or stuff like that and if you’re trying to hide cables, the worst kind of cable you’re gonna be able to hide is pitch black. I couldn’t go to Best Buy or any electronics store and find white HDMI cables. This was amazing.
M**K
Cable is Great for HD, not so much for UHD, however.
The construction, look, feel and every "physical" characteristic of this 35' cable is top-notch. Of course, at this price, these are not "solid core" cables, but for the purpose of a custom installation and running a MAXIMUM 1080P signal, you needn't spend more.I have to "assume" these cables are capable of transmitting a 4K signal -- I have to assume because, as far as I can determine, even a solid core cable is incapable of sustaining, maintaining, transmitting a 4K signal for any distance greater than perhaps 15 - 20 feet. I am, at this point, also unaware of a signal strength amplifier that would accomplish this feat either.So, if you're running (as I am) a UHD (4K) DVD player as your signal (out) and expect the UHD TV (in) to actually receive a 4K signal, you should know it is highly UNLIKELY you will be able to watch a 4K DVD (or NetFlix or Amazon) if the signal has to pass through 35'.I went ahead and installed the cable and this cable is plugged into my Samsung 75' UHD HDMI 3. 1080i and 1080P are fantastic, the picture is the best I've seen from the (calibrated) UHD-TV. No 4K, however -- when I try 4K, I get a message on the TV that the input is "seen" as 4K but the "connection" does not support the 2.2 codec.Thankfully, the TV is mounted on a TV stand that happens to have two shelves -- one for the center channel and one for the Panamax power supply/surge supressor; there is plenty of space for a new Sony X800 UHD DVD player.I set up the player using a much shorter HDMI cable input to HDMI 2. I then ran a COAX cable through the walls back to the AVP "digital audio" in.When I watch a "regular" DVD (BluRay) or DirecTV or an LG SuperBlue player, I use the AVP as an audio+video switching unit over this cable carrying no more than a 1080P signal to the TV's HDMI 3. When I watch UHD content, I switch the TV to HDMI 2, the AVP to AUX2 which has been mapped to "coax-in". There are no lip sync issues and the picture "sees" a true UHD input rather than an "up converted" 1080P to UHD ("fake" UHD) input.Hopefully this makes sense -- the cables are great. Currently, it is "just the way that it is" in terms of the length of the cable and the signal decay of UHD.
W**R
Decent cable
Worked as it should, it's a decent cable, just not very flexible.
P**W
Excellent HDMI Cable!
Works great to project from my laptop PC to the flat-screen TV.The candy stripe is a nice not only as eye candy (pun intended:) but to easilylocate when stored with other cables.Happy with this purchase!
D**N
the information basically says that good cables will "definitely" work up to about 40 feet
I purchased the 40' long version of the Ultra cable for an "In wall / in ceiling" application, and I needed every last inch of it. If you look online at the various testing that has been done of HDMI cables, the information basically says that good cables will "definitely" work up to about 40 feet, and will "most likely" work at somewhat longer distances. I didn't want to risk things, so I purchased the shortest cable I could possibly have.The quality is excellent, and I have no signal issue over the 40-foot length. The only thing that I will point out as a potential "gotcha": At the widest point, the vinyl/rubber behind the HDMI connector is 7/8" of an inch wide. That is pretty huge. The place where I had to run my cables required that I drill a couple of new holes through my basement ceiling, and it was in a very awkward location; barely within reach of the drill with my arm fully extended. I drilled these holes prior to the arrival of the Ultra cable, and I drilled them at 3/4" diameter -- after all, no HDMI cable could possibly be more than 3/4" wide, could it? Apparently it can. I could not realistically go back and drill bigger holes, so instead I filed about 1/8" of the vinyl off of the widest part of the HDMI cable. Problem solved. Just be aware that these are pretty "meaty" connectors if you have any in-wall holes you need to pass the cables through.
Trustpilot
3 weeks ago
2 weeks ago