the magic of power cords


We need a bit of magic in our lives. It might be the reason why audiophilia has such traction among people from all walks of life.

The neophyte's skepticism is likely proportional to the level of technical training - the more you think you know, the stronger the conviction that, for example, the power cable business is a sham: "electrons are electrons" and "if the house cabling is bad, why would the last 3 feet matter?". The stronger the conviction, the more humbling the experience of hearing the power cord magic in action.

A few years back a Sophia Electric amp came into my hands with what looked like a generic power cord. The few non-generic cords I tried (Audioquest AC15, Audio Magic XSteam, Shunyata Research Diamondback) made a significant difference for the worse. The thin, black, generic-looking original cable allowed for a clarity and definition of voice and instruments that got totally washed out with the aftermarket cables. A night-and-day difference. No doubt - the power cord made a huge difference - but not in the expected direction. The Audioquest AC15 was particularly bad.

For awhile, I kept trying them around on all incoming equipment (be it DACs, preamps or amps). The AC15 sounded so bad every time that after awhile I wasn't even trying it out.

Many years and few amps later - something seemed not quite right with the presentation of my KAV-300i: slightly dull upper bass. Power cord: Zu Birth. Finally (after multiple interconnects and few speaker cable swaps) I pull out the power cord stash (same as above). This time around the AC15 was the great surprise: it allowed for clarity and macro dynamics well above the others.

What do I learn? Nothing, really. When is shielding important? When is gauge? How about the conductor or the insulation? How come there isn't one "best" design?

The magic continues.
cbozdog
When I hear phrases such as "night and day difference" or "completely transformed my system" I start to tune out. Clearly cables can make a noticeable sonic difference, but if it reaches that magnitude, then something is wrong with the rest of your system, or the cable in question.

BTW, magic is applied technology that you don't understand.
Onhwy, The key to understanding my use of the term "transformed" is linked to the virtual absence of fatigue I experienced after replacing the PCs. I did not mean to say that it completely changed the overall sound. Perhaps I could have used a different word, but what I heard was far more than an incremental or marginal improvement.
You are of course welcome to tune out.
See my system thread for my recent experience dabbling with a new power cord upgrade.
Man I'm too cheap to spend even $20 for aftermarket PC unless my stock breaks. There's certainly a difference between Night and Day vs. marginal improvement(if certainly any)
The fact is I haven't seen them being used at recording studios where noise floor is more of the important factor than in home audio. I bet them don't even know what is Shaniata or Voortual Doonamics. Did anyone ever ask one self why? Because smart should not and cannot be fooled. Following studio gear standards, you can achieve fantastic sound performance for money spent smart.
"night and day"... on my end, it means simply "pleasure vs. lack thereof" when listening to the same tune.

To Onhwy61: "magic is applied technology that I don't understand". Thank you for your condescending remark my friend.

I'm proposing that magic is good. If there was a formula that actually worked, then the mystery would vanish and audiophilia would... (shock)... die off? No more cable-filled closets, mix and match gear etc...