Re the RCA socket, I must admit to being quite fond of them really despite being bloody cheap, pretty flimsily made but I have found them to be really good at the job of connecting 'HiFi' components together - I can't recall ever having a 'bad connection' despite hurried connection reaching out of view and a truck load of dust.
For me this is rather odd as I generally despise 'value engineering' but the RCA got it pretty close to right. I have had many times the issues with pl259, BNCs. I have had a few issues with xlr but blame the idiot who didn't put it together properly (moi 🙄)
Ns, 4mm banana, triax and SMAs I have had a good run with.
When I was still working at the TV studio, we had a couple of "all in one" video projector/screen combos, which we loaned out to various deserving organisations, along with a VCR.
Both devices had mono sound, with RCA sockets for audio, & BNC for video.
Whenever they were needed, it was easy to dig up a properly crimped 75 Ohm BNC video lead of the appropriate length, but the audio ones had usually either disappeared, or been damaged since the previous loan.
As they normally needed to be relatively long, "ready made" leads from Jaycar or whatever, were no good, & repair of the existing damaged ones usually excessively time consuming, the default was to make up new ones locally for each loan.
Our standard "shielded twin conductor" audio cable, although quite thin, was still a bit hard to terminate in the "El Cheapo" RCA connectors commonly available, & we didn't use the single shielded stuff enough elsewhere to warrant buying a reel.
The result was always a job that no one was satisfied with, burnt up man-hours for no financial return, & if it survived the loan, would be chucked into a box of other audio leads, where it would, as said before, often disappear.
We got sick of this, & noting that the RCA sockets on both devices were quite rugged, so would survive the extra mass of the coax, bought in some BNC to RCA adaptors
Now, we only had to supply 2 "video" cables, fit the adaptors to one set, & had a much more reliable setup.(to audio, the video coax was just "shielded single conductor cable".)