@dletch2
If you can't prove it with a blind listening test, then it is not there.
All right, whatever you say, let's move on.
What's an acoustic cable? Do you mean speaker cable? I don't think you understand fields. Applied voltage generates a field independent of current. That will be an electrostatic field.
I apologize for the translation difficulties, of course this is a speaker cable, and the field is electromagnetic. but that doesn't change the point, if the grid emits audible radiation in some way, then the anode will emit tens of times stronger one. However, the wires on the grid (IC) and the anode (SC) make a proportionate contribution to the sound of the amplifier.
Now let's try to figure out whether the fields can determine the audibility of power cables. Last time you replied something? strange about it:
The level of the voltage changes at 60Hz. The frequency of the current may have a fundamental at 60Hz, but there will be harmonics up to many KHz and above.
It is completely unclear how HF harmonics from a power cable get into the signal circuit and how 60 Hz buzzing can affect the music signal except to cause something like the same buzzing?