Power cable education needed


Hi everyone. I need some education on power cables. I have been reading that a good power cable is vital to a good sounding system. If that is true wouldn’t the companies the make the components include a good power cable to insure their product sounds the best that it can ? Should I evaluate the power cables in all of the components in my system? 
ronboco
Ron -
One more suggestion. Seems like power cords by "Audio Envy" are getting a lot of positive buzz around here. I haven’t tried them but an audio-bud has them and by comparison to more expensive cords, he found them much better. There’s at least one thread about Audio Envy on A’gon. Might make some interesting reading for you.

My three rules of audio: 1) There’s always something better sounding out there. 2) You can always spend more. 3) #2 does not guarantee arrival at #1.

Good luck, have fun and hope you find something that lets you enjoy your music even more.
I can't spell Synergistic either. They are however my favorite. Not necessarily because they are the very best. But because they have been so consistently good for so many years there are a ton of them out there and so whatever your budget you can simply buy the newest/best one and be pretty much guaranteed it will sound great.  

I had until recently a combination of SR and Shunyata. Caelin Gabriel actually came and demo'd the one I have. He is based just across Puget Sound from me. Those have been replaced with M101 now, insanely better but also a lot more expensive. Oh well the last ones I had were fine for a good 20 years, these will probably be the last ones for me now. 


If a manufacturer does not include and “adequate “ power cord....that being the gauge is too small to “adequately “ supply the said component with electricity..... there is another name for that power cord. It becomes a “light bulb”. So why would any manufacturer save money on supplying the customer with a power cord that was too small to do the job? This power cord argument makes no sense.

if you buy a larger gauge power cord than needed the component relies on the incoming fuse to protect it from getting hit with too much power. There is one answer...stay with the cord supplied by the engineers that designed the product. 
My favorite idea that I’ve read today is from my buddy MC....go with a larger power cord and a fuse with 2-3xs greater rating. Let it roll! I think I’m going to start audio grade fire extinguishers!
the component relies on the incoming fuse to protect it from getting hit with too much power
Uhhh.... fuses aren't current limiting devices. Components draw as much power as they draw, all according to Ohm's law, I=V/R. Put a 10 ohm resistor across a 10 volt potential, it will draw 1 ampere of current for 10 watts (I*V) of power. If you put a 300 amp fuse in front, it still draws 1 amp, because, well, 10 ÷ 10 = 1.  Not a problem if it's a 1 watt resistor. But if it's only a half watt resistor, a half amp fuse won't "limit" the current to half an amp. Its filament will melt, releasing the magic smoke that limits the current to exactly 0 amperes, and leaves the component's magic smoke fully intact.