sorry, but I totally disagree with millercarbon. If you know what you're doing, a DIY cable can match or beat other manufactured power cables equal or even more expensive.
That being said, nobody really answered indyvw's question. I see williewonka answered, but seems to have confusion between a C7 and a C17 connector. The C7 is a 2-pole mini-plug that is found on many smaller devices, such as some bluray players among other things. In this case, Furutech makes very good connectors.
The C17, on the other hand, is the same thing as a standard C13/C15, but without the ground conductor. This is for equipment that has a floating ground circuit. It is common in things such as receivers and sometimes bluray players and even amps. The idea is to "float" the ground so that you don't have ground loop hum problems. In this situation, you can just use a standard IEC connector. Even if the power cord/connector uses all 3 conductors, the equipment it's plugged into will not use the ground conductor. All is good.
That being said, nobody really answered indyvw's question. I see williewonka answered, but seems to have confusion between a C7 and a C17 connector. The C7 is a 2-pole mini-plug that is found on many smaller devices, such as some bluray players among other things. In this case, Furutech makes very good connectors.
The C17, on the other hand, is the same thing as a standard C13/C15, but without the ground conductor. This is for equipment that has a floating ground circuit. It is common in things such as receivers and sometimes bluray players and even amps. The idea is to "float" the ground so that you don't have ground loop hum problems. In this situation, you can just use a standard IEC connector. Even if the power cord/connector uses all 3 conductors, the equipment it's plugged into will not use the ground conductor. All is good.