High end power cables are cool things that appeal to the audio nut. If you like them buy them. I strongly doubt they make any difference in sound; the nuance here is to avoid the really cheap stock ones. Audio Science Review is the most clearheaded opinion on things like this. The fact that many of the people who like fancy cables are tube enthusiasts says it all.
I don’t fully agree.
For one I am not a power cable “believer”, but I suppose if I saw one make a difference then I could be.
Secondly, many tube amps in particular have massive reserves of energy. One can turn off the power switch and they play for many seconds with the same authority as with the power switch on. If the amp was not buffering the energy as a DC in capacitors, then we would hear 60 Hz coming out as the rails were pulsating with the incoming power. But that is pretty rare… I have not heard that happen myself.
The preference of tube amp harmonics is not really something that would preclude ASR membership. If one can show that SS harmonics are creating “off putting” sounds, then if those metrics show that tubes do not have those harmonics… then that it is also providing a science based reason why tubes might be preferred.
So let’s not convolve tubes with power cords, and lets not devalue objective measurements to be something that cannot be used to describe the sound of an amplifier in a system.
Lastly there are almost no measurements that show that an amplifier works better with such-n-such brand of a power cord. If the power cord makers showed a lower noise spectrum at the end of the cord, or that the amplifier had a more stable DC rail voltage, then it would be an easy way to claim that a difference exists and that there is a rational reason to consider their purchase…
I think that the power cords look cool, and have cool names, but I doubt they do much. And I await being convinced by something more than personal testimony and story-time lore.