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George- Its been a pleasure to have this one last 'who's on first' conversations.
Always confused regarding power cords. Why go bigger gauge than the wiring from your circuit panel to the wall receptacle (typically 14 gauge, sometimes 12 gauge)? Why shield when nothing from the power plant to the wall receptacle is shielded?
Power drills,smps,etc produce RFI in the audio band,they can get into the electronics in many ways,transformers do emit RFI in the audio band (100hz) ,in close proximity with a gain circuit this hum is in the audio band and the amp amplifies it,it's rather complex subject,but i agree with your point about house wiring being unshielded, interconnects shielding is a must
I agree with this, but I do see the value in an RF choke in the form of a ferrite collar around the power cord at the component end (this way both conducted and radiated RFI is absorbed).
Except they usually make your stuff sound awful.
That has not been my experience.
Ok, if we're giving grammar lessons, 'effect' is generally a noun not a verb. No offense intended, these have got to be two of the most commonly confused words in the English language.
If marketing it results in more profits, the answer is always: yes!