If video stays steady while audio cuts out, the cable is still a plausible cause, but it is not the only one. The fastest way to find the fault is to isolate the signal path, swap one part at a time, and match the test to the cable type.
Does your screen look perfectly sharp while the sound drops out for a second at the worst possible moment? In real-world monitor, TV, and desktop AV setups, a clean swap test plus a proper continuity or live-path check can usually tell you whether the cable is the problem or just the easiest thing to blame. This approach helps separate a bad cable from a bad setting, bad port, or overloaded device.
Why Audio Can Fail While Video Looks Fine
A brief momentary loss of sound is exactly what it sounds like: the sound level falls out or disappears for a moment during otherwise normal playback. That matters in gaming, office presentations, and portable display setups because your eyes may tell you the connection is stable while the audio path is already failing.
In mixed audio-video links such as HDMI, the failure can come from the cable, but it can also come from handshake problems, worn connectors, tight bends, excessive run length, or weak shielding. Any of those can affect audio before the screen goes black in some setups, especially with consumer gear and adapters, as noted in common AV issue troubleshooting. In practice, intermittent audio is often a borderline condition rather than a completely dead cable.
A structured signal-chain approach is the most reliable way to work through this. Start at the source, follow the physical path, confirm what processes or routes the signal, and only then judge the endpoint. That prevents the classic mistake of replacing three cables when the real problem was a laptop output setting, a receiver audio format mismatch, or a stressed USB subsystem.
Start With the Fastest Checks First
The first pass should always be physical. A cable condition check catches more problems than most people expect: bent plugs, loose shells, crushed insulation, exposed wire, dirty contacts, and strain near the connector are common failure points. On gaming desks and standing desks, the weak point is often the last 6 to 12 inches near the plug because that section moves every day.

Then do the simplest live test: reseat both ends firmly and replay the same scene, track, or game moment that caused the dropout. If the sound cuts out only when the plug is touched, the connector or jack is suspect even if the image never flickers. That usually points to a mechanical connection problem rather than a software problem.
After that, use a known-good spare. A single-variable cable swap is still the fastest high-value diagnostic step in AV work because it changes one variable and gives a real answer under the same conditions. If the dropout disappears with the spare cable, the original cable becomes the leading suspect. If the dropout remains, widen the investigation to the source device, display, dock, AVR, soundbar, or operating system.

How to Tell When the Cable Is Really the Problem
Clear signs of a cable fault
A cable is the most likely cause when the dropout follows that cable to a different device chain, when moving or pressing the cable reproduces the issue, or when visible wear matches the symptom. Connection fit and cable wear matter because intermittent audio often comes from a connection that is neither fully open nor fully closed.
Another strong clue is a consistent pattern. If audio drops out only on one input, one run, or one device position, and a spare cable fixes it immediately, the diagnosis is fairly solid. For example, if your 8 ft HDMI cable between a portable display and a mini PC fails, but a 3 ft spare runs clean for an hour with identical settings, the original run should be replaced before you dig deeper into the system.

Basic electrical tests help, but they are not enough for every cable
A continuity test checks whether the electrical path is intact from end to end. For speaker wire, RCA, or XLR, that is genuinely useful. If the meter shows no continuity on a conductor, or a short between conductors that should be isolated, the cable is faulty.

For speaker cable specifically, a speaker cable continuity check is practical and reliable when the cable is disconnected from equipment. Low resistance and correct polarity suggest the run is intact, while an open circuit or unusually high resistance points to damage.
The important nuance is that continuity is not the same as performance. Complex digital cables such as HDMI can pass a simple end-to-end test and still fail under real bandwidth, timing, or connector-stability conditions. In plain English, a cable can be connected and still be bad in use.
A Practical Way to Isolate the Fault
Use this quick comparison during live troubleshooting:

What you observe |
What it usually means |
Audio drops when the cable is touched or rotated |
Connector wear, loose fit, or a broken conductor near the plug |
Audio drops on one cable but not on a same-type spare |
A cable fault is likely |
Audio drops on every cable on the same port |
A port, source device, or settings issue is more likely |
Video stays stable but audio fails only after long sessions |
Heat, handshake instability, drivers, or background load may be involved |
Audio fails at repeatable time intervals |
System load or scheduled tasks may be involved, not the cable |
That last row matters more than many people realize. Some repeatable audio interruptions happen because background tasks or CPU spikes interrupt real-time audio handling, even though the rest of the system looks normal. If your dropout happens at exact intervals, or only when the machine is busy, do not let the stable picture push you into blaming the cable too early.
When the Cable Is Probably Innocent
If the same dropout persists across multiple known-good cables, the fault is usually upstream or downstream. In office display docks and creator setups, common non-cable causes include the wrong audio output selection, muted stages in the chain, outdated drivers, or routing mistakes, as described in common AV troubleshooting.
Computer-based audio is especially vulnerable to overall system behavior. Reports on audio dropout tracing tools show that network adapters, GPU drivers, power management, and storage location can all interrupt audio even when the display remains usable. That is why a monitor with stable video does not automatically clear the PC, dock, or interface.
Cable length and type also matter. A long run, tight bend, or poorly built cable can create borderline behavior without total failure. For speaker wire, proper gauge matters over distance, and for general AV links, better construction and shielding often improve reliability more than price or branding. The practical move is to buy the right spec and the right length, not the most expensive label.
Should You Repair, Reseat, or Replace?
If the issue is dirt, oxidation, or a plug that was never fully seated, cleaning and reseating may solve it. If the cable jacket is crushed, the connector is loose, or the dropout appears when the cable is flexed, replacement is usually the reliable choice. That is especially true for HDMI, USB-C video and audio paths, and thin portable-display cables that get tossed into bags and drawers.
Repair makes more sense for serviceable analog cables than for molded digital ones. Speaker wire and some pro audio cables can be re-terminated cleanly, but once a molded HDMI or USB-C cable becomes intermittent, replacing it is usually faster, safer, and more dependable over time.
A stable picture with unstable sound is not a contradiction. It is a warning that the connection may be marginal, and marginal connections do not improve under competitive gaming, long meetings, or daily travel. Diagnose the cable by inspecting it, swapping it, and testing it in the full signal path. If it fails those tests, replace it. If it passes, move quickly to ports, settings, drivers, and system load so your screen stays immersive and your audio stays locked in.







