Sean - No offense taken.
Why is it that most engineers / designers / manufacturers have such a hard time thinking of a power cord as being anything more than a "conduit for power delivery"
I can only speak for myself. A power cord is just one segment of a longer power transmission circuit, which can be described as series resistance and inductance and parallel capacitance. However, the catch is whether this is described as a lumped parasitic or a distributed set of parasitics, like a transmission-line. The former is used at low frequency and the latter at high-frequency. The debate goes on ...
Aren't the internals of a PLC made up of capacitors, inductors (which is nothing more than wire or wire on a former), resistors, diodes, impedance altering devices, etc.. ??? What would stop someone from applying filter technology and the associated componentry to a power cord design ?
Nothing. You can get filtering effects from different power cord constructions or just add filtering elements to the cord, such as inductors, ferrites, resistors and caps.. I do not happen to believe in filtering in PC's myself, except for the ground wire. This can be useful to minimize noise from ground-loops.
Stop thinking of a power cord as an extension cord and start thinking of it as a part of the power supply.
I agree. Certainly is a part of the power system. As is the transformer on the pole and the transmission lines that deliver to that. However, the further that you get from the component, the effects of the component load on the system become smaller and smaller because the impedance of the source gets increasingly lower. At some point, you ignore the effects because they are second-order. I have chosen this point to the be power panel in the house. This causes a small error in any calculations of power delivery.