Good post- just one or two points to think about...
The high capacitance of the quad cables (especially the miniature console quads) is much less of an issue for balanced line-level use than those other folks claim: I think that that 12 foot rule is *far* too conservative a number. After all, with line driver impedances down in the tens of ohms, you'd need a pretty huge amount of cable at 50pF/ft to get a measurable rolloff in the audio band. You *might* see some measurable phase-shift issues up near 500 feet, but using it for 50-100 foot line-level balanced runs should not pose a problem, to my way of thinking. Shoot, even mic-level signals can run up to about 1000 feet in well installed shielded pair...
Don't get me wrong: of course, you want to keep all cable runs as short as possible, and there's probably some gear with disastrously bad line drivers that would prove to be exceptions. But using 12 feet as the limit for line level signals is overconstraining the problem. I've seldom seen a studio where the run from board to rack was less than 30 wire feet! Don't lose sleep over that.
I personally don't use quad for line level runs simply because of the expense. Quad's forte is in the super-low-level world of microphone interconnect, simply because it has measurably superior noise immunity: that's inherent in the quad design, and is not just marketing fluff. However, the bang for the buck isn't necessarily there in line level use: that 40-50dB difference in relative levels make the quad's additional noise immunity pretty well moot when used at line level. Noise that's -70dB relative to a mic-level signal would be at -120dB with respect to a line level signal (ignoring the source impedance for the moment). *Way* down in the noise... That's why I use foil shielded pair for permanent line-level install stuff. But your mileage may vary! Using quad at line level will not _hurt_ anything- it's just not the best cost/value tradeoff, in my opinion. Of course, I may well be eating crow in 5 years, when the state of the art improves further, and I have to rip out all my fixed interconnect to keep up. (;-)
What you really _don't_ want to do is to use the quad stuff for high-impedance use, like guitar cables. 50pF/ft is *far* too high a capacitance, and the loading will _kill_ the HF response of an instrument with even relatively short cables. A 25' guitar cable made with Mogami miniature quad would not be a good match for your Telecaster, unless you want it to sound more like a Gibson EBO with tape-wound strings. (;-)
I started out very skeptical about
quad mic cable, because I started my career in the pre-quad days. But after doing my own testing, and being completely skeptical: I definitely can hear the difference between good quad and good two-conductor in microphone use, especially in high-EMI areas (like live recording on a stage with theatrical dimmers right in the wings!). The noise floor tells the tale. It is nontrivial, and it is very worthwhile for critical recording. And I agree fully that improving the noise floor at every step of the process is critical in getting the best results! I just can't hear the difference between different flavors of quad.
On your noise thing in number 3: if these are line-level TRS cables, consider making a quiet bay. Get a little sheet metal, drill 5 or 6 3/8" holes in it, install 5 or 6 Neutik TRS jacks (get the plastic ones that isolate the jack mounting nut from the sleeve to prevent any possible ground loop wierdies), and solder them up so that tip and ring are connected to sleeve with say 100ohm resistors. Viola': no more noise when cables are parked in it. If you're sure that you'll never accidentally plug a line _out_ into your quiet bay, just short them. But using the resistors will make it accident-proof...