THE Cimple CO CMP-COAX-SGL-CC-WS-BLK-35F vs Silkland S1302

THE Cimple CO CMP-COAX-SGL-CC-WS-BLK-35F and the Silkland S1302 are both well-rated cables, but they solve completely different problems. The Cimple CO is a 35-foot black coaxial cable designed for antenna, cable TV, or satellite runs between a wall plate and a tuner or set-top box. The Silkland S1302 is a 6-foot DisplayPort 2.1 cable built to carry high-bandwidth video and audio between a PC, console, or source device and a monitor or TV with a DisplayPort input. Comparing them directly only makes sense if you are unsure which connection type your setup requires. Once you know whether your devices use coaxial F-connectors or DisplayPort ports, the choice is straightforward.

Quick winner

Neither cable beats the other outright because they serve different connection standards. Pick the Cimple CO for coaxial antenna or cable TV runs; pick the Silkland S1302 for DisplayPort video between a source and a display.

Key differences, measured

  • The Silkland S1302 is 44% cheaper ($9.99 vs $17.97).
  • The THE Cimple CO CMP-COAX-SGL-CC-WS-BLK-35F has 29 ft more length (35.0 ft vs 6.0 ft).
  • The Silkland S1302 is 103.5 lb heavier (120.0 lb vs 16.48 lb).

Side-by-side specs

Spec THE Cimple CO CMP-COAX-SGL-CC-WS-BLK-35F Cable Silkland S1302 Cable
Price $17.97 $9.99
Rating 4.7 (9,200) 4.7 (7,600)
Connectivity Coaxial Displayport 2.1/2.0
Length 35.0 ft 6.0 ft
Color Black Grey
Weight 16.48 lb 120.0 lb

The two contenders

THE Cimple CO CMP-COAX-SGL-CC-WS-BLK-35F Cable

THE Cimple CO CMP-COAX-SGL-CC-WS-BLK-35F cable, Black

THE Cimple CO CMP-COAX-SGL-CC-WS-BLK-35F is a 35-foot RG6 coaxial cable priced at $17.97. It carries a 4.7-star rating across more than 9,200 reviews, which is a strong signal of consistent quality for a coax run. The 35-foot length gives you enough slack to route from a wall outlet to a TV, set-top box, or antenna amplifier without extension couplers. At under $18 for that length, it is competitively priced against big-box house brands. The black jacket blends into most wall and baseboard runs.

Buy this if: Buy the Cimple CO coaxial cable if you are connecting an over-the-air antenna, a cable TV wall outlet, or a satellite receiver to a tuner or TV using F-type coaxial connectors. It is also the right pick if you need a 35-foot run and want to avoid splicing shorter cables together.

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Read the full THE Cimple CO review →

Silkland S1302 Cable

Silkland S1302 cable, Grey

The Silkland S1302 is a 6-foot DisplayPort 2.1 cable priced at $9.99. It holds a 4.7-star rating from over 7,600 buyers. DisplayPort 2.1 supports up to 80 Gbps of bandwidth, making it capable of driving high-resolution or high-refresh-rate displays without compression. At 6 feet, it is the right length for a typical desktop or short AV rack connection. The grey color is neutral and the $9.99 price makes it one of the more affordable DP 2.1 options with a substantial review base behind it.

Buy this if: Buy the Silkland S1302 if your TV, monitor, or AV receiver has a DisplayPort input and you are connecting a PC, gaming console, or source device that outputs DisplayPort. It is a solid choice for anyone who wants a capable, affordable DP 2.1 cable for a desk or short rack setup.

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Read the full Silkland review →

Frequently asked questions

Can I use the Cimple CO coaxial cable for a regular HDTV antenna?

Yes. The Cimple CO is an RG6 coaxial cable with F-type connectors, which is the standard connection for over-the-air antennas. At 35 feet, it gives you enough length to route from an attic or window-mounted antenna down to your TV or antenna amplifier without needing a coupler in the middle. Just make sure your antenna and TV both have F-type coaxial ports.

Is DisplayPort 2.1 backward compatible with older DisplayPort versions?

DisplayPort 2.1 cables are generally backward compatible with older DP ports, though they will operate at the speed of the lower-version port on the device. If your monitor only supports DP 1.4, connecting the Silkland S1302 will work but the connection will cap at DP 1.4 speeds. You still get a reliable signal, just not the full 80 Gbps ceiling that DP 2.1 allows.

Which cable has more buyer feedback?

The Cimple CO has more than 9,200 ratings at 4.7 stars, while the Silkland S1302 has over 7,600 ratings also at 4.7 stars. Both have a meaningful volume of reviews, so neither result is based on a thin sample. Either cable is a safe buy from a trust-the-crowd standpoint.

What if I need both a coaxial run and a DisplayPort connection?

These cables do not overlap in function, so you may genuinely need both. A common setup is a coaxial cable from the wall to a cable box or antenna tuner, plus a DisplayPort or HDMI cable from that source device to the display. In that case, buying one of each is the right move. You can contact us at hello@raltv.com if you need help sorting out which cables your specific devices require.

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