Bonjour Ranier NHSA:
We have studied cables and transmission for AES and SMPTE and presented papers and conferences in 1990s till 2014.
Differences are attenuation/ft, phase response, curve of atten vs freq, self capacitance.
All papramters are per uni distance eg db/100 ft or pF per ft.
All the data is available at the cable manufacturers website, eg
https://www.belden.com/products/cable/coax-triax-cable/50-ohm-coax-cable In general the attenuation increases and capacitance/ft increase as diameter is reduced, eg sequence RG-6/U>>RG59/U>>RG198/U
Cable delay depends on the dielectric constant of the insulator.
cables with teflon or polyethelene, the parameter is 0.75..0.85
https://www.electronics-notes.com/articles/antennas-propagation/rf-feeders-transmission-lines/coaxial-cable-velocity-factor.phpFor short cables in the lab the difference will be th frequency response and fast edges ....
eg a cheap Chinese cable may be much worse that a fine Pomona and the Tektronix or HP CAL cables much better.
Usual lengths are 0.5 and 1m
As the cables are so easy to buy, we seldom make them up.
Termination for best frequency response requires special connectors and crimp tools.
A fine example is Belden 1694A (75 Ohm) which goes to 6 GHz.
So it depends on what you are oding, eg looking at audio 20- kHz it may not matter, calibrating of a 1 GHz scope transits big difference.
Indeed for pS pulsers NO cables are used, and the pulse gen (Leo Bodnar) has a BNC (Female) direct to the scope BNC.
By the way, the connector on the scope is a BNC MALE and the cable usually has BNC female.
Its the bayonet shell and not the center conductor pin that determines the connector type.
Bon Chance,
Jon