The three ideal cases above give frequency-independent amplitude and delay from source to load.
If the frequencies of interest are very low (compared to the reciprocal of the cable’s delay time), with arbitrary source and load resistances, then the cable acts as a capacitance in parallel with the load resistance, and produces a R-C low pass filter governed by that capacitance and the parallel combination of the source and load resistances. For example, 3 feet of RG-58/U 50 ohm cable has approximately 5 nsec delay and 75 pF capacitance. At 20 kHz audio, with 600R source and high resistance load, the signal sees a filter down by 3 dB at 3.5 MHz.