BlueRigger cables are backed by a Limited Lifetime Warranty and US-based customer support
Size:35 Feet BlueRigger™ High Speed HDMI Cables are premium quality cables for your gaming or home theater setup.
Compatible with latest HDTV technologies BlueRigger cables are fully certified to support the latest & advanced HDMI features.
Backwards Compatible with Previous HDMI Standards The cable is backwards compatible with all previous HDMI standards, so you’ll be able to use this cable with all your HDMI devices. When you connect two devices with different HDMI standards, they will automatically find the best available connection.
Quality Picture and Sound - 26AWG - CL3 Rated for in-wall installations - Supports 3D, Ethernet and Audio Return - Supports 1080p, 1080i, 720p, 480p, and 480i Resolutions - Works with all HDTVs, Blu-ray players, Xbox 360, PS3 and other HDMI devices - HDCP Compliant - Full metal jacket connector provides strength, durability and prevents interference as compared to other cables - Supports True HD Dolby 7.1 and DTS-HD Master Audio
Warranty All BlueRigger HDMI cables are backed by a 1 year warranty. Please contact us via email if you have any questions.
I bought this cable after determining that the 10 meter Binary B5 Standard Speed with Ethernet HDMI cable that was installed by a “professional” in my home theater didn’t push 1080p with Deep Color. I got blinks of random static and flickers, to no output on occassion, at 1080p with Deep Color turned on in my PS3. I had to either drop 1080p, or drop Deep Color to make it work. It took me a few months of buying a new blu ray player, then buying a new receiver, then swapping various cables before I came to the sad conclusion that the 30+ foot IN WALL (no conduit) run of HDMI cable was the problem. I confronted my installer, who told me this…“It is well known across the AV industry that NO cable is High-Speed after 10 feet.”.-Randy Johnson, President, Pure Audio, Richmond, VA.He is WRONG. He also gouged me for $200 bucks on that cable. Hard lessons were learned.I have a Denon 2312CI receiver, a Sony PS3 Slim for my Blu Ray, and a Panasonic 65” VT30 Plasma TV.I ran this $23 35 foot Blue Rigger cable across the floor to my TV, and my PS3, which never even showed 3D resolutions in the list of possible outputs at ALL, now went up to 1080p with 3D with the Deep Color turned ON. No flickers, no static, just a beautiful picture.Now I am stuck having to rip apart my newly finished home theater walls to redo what some prick (who won’t replace the old or install the new cable–i.e. your problem, not mine) screwed up.Lessons for everyone:1. Do not use anything less than High Speed cable with Ethernet. This cable works great for only $23 bucks.2. Don’t trust your AV installer, he is feeding on the ignorance of the general public regarding HDMI cables. Cheap cables work just as well or better than the expensive ones.3. If you are doing a hometheater in your house during it’s construction, RUN THE WIRES YOURSELF, and USE CONDUIT IF POSSIBLE. You will do as good a job or better, and save yourself a lot of money and aggravation.4. If you live in Richmond and you are considering having an installer prewire, DO NOT use Pure Audio.
This is a good cable for running in an enclosed wall.Why use CL-Rated cable?The main reason I’d recommend spending a little more to get the CL rated cable is not because it’s going to give you a better signal, but because it means the manufacturer has tested the cable to meet the standards necessary to run in wall. HDMI signals aren’t high power so it’s highly unlikely they would cause a fire, but if you ever did have a fire you don’t want to deal with an insurance company saying they won’t compensate for damages because they found the wrong cabling in the wall. To me, that’s the value equation you have to apply when considering running cable in an enclosed wall.Why use this particular cable?The cable itself is pliable and i didn’t have any problems with kinking. I don’t know the exact dimension of the plugs, but I used a 5⁄8 spade bit to drill my holes and I was able to pass the connector through. It’s a snug fit through there, so if you’re planning to run other cable in the same holes, I’d suggest running this HDMI cable first, then any other cabling. The plugs come with plastic guards on the end which helps keep drywall mud out of the connector - something to consider depending on your application.
I’ve used a few BlueRigger cables in the office, and they always work fine. This time I needed the 35-foot cable. Would it perform?We had an issue where some users hooking up a laptop to an older TV got very poor picture quality. It might work just fine, or it might work with a lower refresh rate, or it might not work at all. One possible problem was, we chained a few cables together to cross the distance from the HDMI port to the tabletop. Another problem was, these cables were old! It was worth trying to replace the cables first, instead of getting a whole new 70” TV. BlueRigger’s cable did the trick, and now we all have good plug & play display in that room.
Tough cable, thick rubber, excellent grip on the heads, solid fit when you plug it into your computer/TV. Mine is the 25 ft version so I can display stuff from my computer onto my plasma TV, does the job well. Great buy, picture signal is clear even with this length.Used it for about 2 years, then the connection became a little faulty, but I can’t tell if it’s the cable or the HDMI port on my MacBook. Not surprising since it puts a fair amount of pressure on the port, the cable being as big as it is. Since I am not sure, I put 4 stars, otherwise it would be 5 stars. My advice, if you plug it into a laptop or something fairly mobile, don’t move the laptop around too much with the cable in there. I had the laptop on my bed with the cable. I should have used the laptop stand on my nearby desk and left the cable in there. The sheer size and weight of the cable puts some torque on the port, so you might cut down on the life of your device’s HDMI port and this cable. I wish HDMI and USB ports were more like my MagSafe2 charging port on my MacBook. Can’t have it all, I suppose.
BlueRigger makes some really great products. I’ve got this cable running from an HTPC with a DVI-HDMI adapter to a Hitachi Projector with a HDMI-MD-1 adapter and it works perfectly. No loss in resolution, color, no weird scanning issues, drop-outs, etc. Cable says 26 awg wire too. I almost bought another HDMI cable on Amazon until I noticed the stated wire gauge was 30. Didn’t think that met the standard for a cable this long. But this one works, and 35 feet was just long enough to get from the computer to the projector with almost nothing to spare, which is crazy because I originally only though I needed 25 feet, but went ahead and got the longer one because the price difference was minimal. But I’m glad I got the extra length because this thing is so thick that it’s doesn’t quite bend and turn like you’d think, gotta leave a service loop at both ends of some sort. That’s my only advice. I’m only running 1024x768 at 60Hz but I suspect it won’t have any issues with the higher resolutions.
A nice and sturdy cable. Looks good enough to to leave in the open. The cable is slightly thicker then some other cables that might ship with TVs, blue-ray players, or monitors,…
All is working good, and was received before the delivery date.
Great product
Does the job at a good price
works perfect great quality
These work great, full shield, extreme length at a fraction of the cost of going to best buy or monster cable, etc.
Great product. Just as described. Thanks.
This cable works perfectly for image and sound. I am always a bit nervous with long cables and how they might affect image and sound.
So far so good.This was used to replace the old HDMI cable for a projector. With the old cable, we noticed that the projector can not correctly detect the screen resolution.
comments powered by DisqusThe 35 foot cable works great, no issues on 1080P signal from a DVR to a TV.