To hopefully clarify what I alluded to in the aforementioned thread, I'll just make a few statements:
0) I'm talking coaxial cables here. A few oddballs may be twisted pair, but they don't figure into the big picture.
1) Video cables are speced to be 75 ohms. That's a standard. This goes for composite or component video cables.
2) Audio cables have, at various times in the past, been anywhere between 50 and 110 ohms. All work well.
3) Since video cables are 75 ohms, and this number falls conveniently between 50 and 110, they work just dandy for audio cables as well.
4) Since 75 ohm cables work for durn near anything, it makes sense that manufacturer's would simply buy boatloads of 75 ohm cables and simply change the color of the RCA plugs on the ends.
Granted,there may be differences in the manufacture as far as quality, gauge, insulators, RCA plug construction, and a host of other things, but essentially, aside from the color of the RCA plugs on the end, they are the same.
Simply put: Video cables MUST be 75 ohms. Audio cables can be almost anything, but odds are any modern one will be are 75 ohms.
P.S.. you don't deserve a red chicklet, particularly an anonymous one.