I considered the Eightwood cable on Amazon and found the following review useful:
"Being unmarked and at a price of about 1/3 that of Mil-spec RG-400, I was skeptical but decided to give this a try for a non-critical application -- and I was pleasantly surprised. I measured the 40 foot length with a professional grade vector network analyzer (VNA) and compared it to a length of Mil-spec cable I'd previously purchased from a reliable source.
Velocity factor and characteristic impedance (Z0) of the two cables were virtually identical. Also, the Z0 of this cable was at least as constant along the 40 foot length as that of the Mil-spec cable, indicating that the physical construction is uniform with no anomalies. The shields appear to be as tightly wound as those of the Mil-spec cable.
The only difference I could detect was a slightly higher loss. I measured the loss only between 3 and 200 MHz which was the range where I'll be using it. The loss of this cable was about 6% greater at 3 MHz, and 1 to 2 percent greater at 10 - 200 MHz. These could indicate that the silver plating on this cable isn't as thick, or might be some other material. This small difference in loss itself would be insignificant in just about any application, but if due to a plating difference it might mean that the cable would deteriorate in a shorter period than the Mil-spec counterpart, if exposed to the environment for a long time.
At least as far as I'm able to determine, this cable will be useful for a lot of applications calling for RG-400/U, at greatly reduced expense."
The above being said, I bought the milspec stuff from ACS anyway...