Mark
I think the product code you quoted should have been 2D4P5IPV3B.
CABLE DESCRIPTION
Plain annealed copper conductors, solid polyethylene insulated, twisted pair, flame retardant PVC overall sheathed. 100Ω balanced cable suitable for Local Area Network (LAN) for horizontal distribution and backbone network cabling (100 MHz). Suitable for 16 Mbps Token Ring/155 Mbps ATM PMD/100 Base – VG, T4, X, 1000 Base T (Gigabit Ethernet), etc. Cable is UL listed.
CONDUCTOR: Plain annealed copper - 24 AWG
INSULATION: Polyethelene
OUTER SHEATH: PVC 75°C
SHEATH COLOUR: Blue - Standard
ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS
DC RESISTANCE [Ω/100m]: 9.5 Max.
RESISTANCE UNBALANCE%: 3.0 Max.
CHARACTERISTIC IMPEDANCE Ω: 100±15 @ 1-20 MHz
MUTUAL CAPACITANCE [nF/100]: 5.6 Max.
CAPACITANCE UNBALANCE [pF/100m] PAIR TO EARTH 0.8 OR 1 kHz: 340 Max.
VELOCITY OF PROPAGATION: 70%
Note: All electrical characteristics are given at 20°C
Personally, I've never used teflon sugared Cat 5e in my amp or pre-amp. Only the run of the mill stuff (such as this) left over from LAN cabling works at an old worklpace. And I've still plenty of it. Huey knows whether what I have is the Clipsal stuff (unlikely) but it isn't that disimilar in specs. If you go and have a hunt in the skip bin of your local data/telecommunications/office equipment installer I'm sure you'll find loads of the stuff for next to nothing.
I honestly fail to see (hear?) how a wafer thin layer of polyethelene could be audibly different to a wafer thin layer of PTFE over the same length of 24 gauge copper wire..........but then I'm rarely credited with an overabundance of imagination either.
If you are besotted by the idea of teflon coated wire then grab some of this second rate poly coated gear, strip the poly off it and wrap the naked wire in plumbers tape (admittedly not practical for speaker wire). Or do what I do in hookup situations and just use shoelaces as insulation.....