Warrenh wrote:
Since you say that cheaper cords have higher inductance than the more expensive ones: Is it possible to find a $200 cord with the same inductance as one for $1000?
I suppose it is possible. Generally, the things that cause inductance to be low tend to make the cord big, inflexible and more expensive due to more individual wires inside. It is more likely that you will find a cord with less profit built-in that is low-inductance.
Is there a way to know what the exact inductance rating, if there is such a thing,is?
Absolutely. This can be measured with an LCR meter at several frequencies. I like to use 20kHz. All my cords and cables have published measurements. Unfortunately, I am the only manufacturer that I am aware of that publishes power cord characteristics. I believe the reason is that most vendors do not really understand why their cables work or modify the character of the sound. They also are probably suspicious of inductance being the primary factor. They amay be afraid that if they were to publish their inductance numbers, their cables would not rate well. Many of them feel that cords should do some level of filtering. I have found this to be detrimental myself. There are probably situations, particularly with line-level components where filtering the line current could make an improvement, but I believe that the vast majority of these can be attributed to common-mode noise from ground-loops in the systems. Filtering the power-cord is a band-aid at best and does not get at the root-cause of the problem, which is the ground-loop.
If so, is there, then, any other reason to get the $1,000 over the $200 one given identical inductance stats? OR, do we just assume the inductance level is low because they are expensive?
There may be reasons, such as lower dielectric absorption. The use of Teflon insulation in one cord and PVC insulation in another cord with the same inductance can make a difference in the transient response, because their dielectric absorption willl be different. This is a more difficult parameter to measure, and its effects are more subtle. I would be willing to bet that you would notice the difference, though. It gets down to splitting hairs at this point. And, you cannot expect the inductance to be low just because the cost is high. Many cables are sold at prices that people are willing to pay, due to hype, advertising, reputation etc... has nothing to do with performance.
And, how low is low? Do we get to a point of inaudible differences?
Low would be <.05uH/foot. As far as point of diminishing returns, I believe this depends on your amplifier power supply. If it is really poorly designed, you will probably hear improvements for every notch you go lower all the way to .00001 uH/foot. Also depends on how much ROMEX there is in the wall, after all the last 6 feet of a 25 foot run behaves much different than the last 6 feet of an 8 foot run. For all practical purposes, <.01uH/foot is impractical and probably could not be built without using superconductors or really wide copper strips, like a Goertz cable.