Shadorne - I can make case for bad power supply being less affected by power cord than very good one. Here it comes:
Average value of current being drawn from power supply caps is taken from transformer in very sharp pulses. These pulses heat up transformer (higher harmonic content heats-up the core and much higher rms value than average value heats-up the copper) and appear on the power cord. Sharpness and amplitude of these pulses can be determined from diagrams: conduction angle that depends on ratio of transformer output impedance to ESR of capacitor.
Amplifier with poor capacitors (higher ESR) will have longer pulses of smaller amplitude and will possibly be less dependant on gauge of power cord (for voltage drops) or shielding (for polution).
Mentioned conduction angle is a Catch 22 for designers - in order to know how big transformer should be (to accomodate for bigger losses caused by sharp current pulses) conduction angle has to be found. It require value of transformer's output impedance - not known since transformer is not designed yet.
I made this a little bit technical to show that anything can be proved. Somebody can probably make equally valid case that proves just the opposite.
Average value of current being drawn from power supply caps is taken from transformer in very sharp pulses. These pulses heat up transformer (higher harmonic content heats-up the core and much higher rms value than average value heats-up the copper) and appear on the power cord. Sharpness and amplitude of these pulses can be determined from diagrams: conduction angle that depends on ratio of transformer output impedance to ESR of capacitor.
Amplifier with poor capacitors (higher ESR) will have longer pulses of smaller amplitude and will possibly be less dependant on gauge of power cord (for voltage drops) or shielding (for polution).
Mentioned conduction angle is a Catch 22 for designers - in order to know how big transformer should be (to accomodate for bigger losses caused by sharp current pulses) conduction angle has to be found. It require value of transformer's output impedance - not known since transformer is not designed yet.
I made this a little bit technical to show that anything can be proved. Somebody can probably make equally valid case that proves just the opposite.