On/Off Switch


People spend a lot of effort to feed their audio system with clean power. Dedicated power lines, new wires from the electrical panel, special hospital grade or audio grade power outlets, expensive devices to do additional power filtering are just some of the things that are quite often done in this hobby. Then we buy expensive power cords, special audiophile fuses, and even replace the factory IEC inlets with better quality.
This is all good, and I understand that once you have a system with high enough resolution, the changes are audible. But how often do we open the cover of our equipment to discover that although we spend so much money on a special power cord, the wire (incidentally much thinner and cheaper than our special power cord) from the IEC goes all the way from the back to the front just to go through a cheap on/off switch and back to the rear or the middle of the chassis.
I just looked at partsconnexion, hificollective, vhaudio, and a few other web sites that specialize in audiophile grade parts and could not find a nice solid audio grade on/off switch. Why is that? If a fuse makes a difference in the sound, and (according to some manufacturers) even the direction of the fuse has audible differences (something I can never hear btw), it would make sense that the contact parts of the on/off switch would be important too.
So my real question is does the quality of the on/off switch matter and what is a good on/off switch to use in a power amplifier?
nenon
All this shows the futility of the power cable story. This is not to say that a decent power switch would not be a good thing. However, I would not start tinkering with mains voltage components. A well designed amplifier should have this covered, particularly from a well respected mainstream manufacturer that has a lot to lose.
All this shows nothing more than the futility of cheap power switches. In gear that can be left on all time, you might consider removing the switch, and its associated wiring leads, altogether and use slightly better wiring in the bypass. Many DIY'ers and modders have recommended this. 

If you need the switch in place, consider something like the higher-quality, silver-contact, 2-way toggle switches. Online electrical supply houses often have them. Parts Express might have one or two, I don't know. Also try Goldpoint.

The cheap-@ss sliding, pushbutton or rocker switches in almost everything are indeed a bottleneck for sound, but most audiophiles are not aware of it and as a result, so far, neither are the manufacturers. I'm sure they'll figure it out someday.
LED indicator lights have also been found to slightly pollute the sound as well.