I still don't get what makes CC super tweaky as you claimed vs a "Designed" "Audiophile" cords. I'm only trying to understand what makes CC super tweaky in your books vs what you prefer. Commodity power cords come all kinds of flavors not breaking the bank isn't a negative in my books nor does it imply low quality in this case. CC is has actual liability for producing inferior products what liability does a boutique audiophile manufactured cord plugged into audio gear faces?
Ok, assuming you don't understand what I said already...
You can't lump all high end cables into one box, that's absolutely not correct, but it seems to be a vital aspect of your framing of other power cables vs CC. I have to say, the way you frame the discussion is clever, and suits your goals, but it's inaccurate. Power cables don't all sound the same, that's ridiculous.
While some high end cables may be designed subjectively, many, including mine, are designed to optimal specifications in terms of electrical characteristics and materials used. This is much different from a cable designed entirely by subjective evaluation and tweaking to achieve some sort of end result.
If you compare CC to an optimal reference cable, it'll have materials that are lower quality in terms of metal purity and grain structure, conductivity, dielectric absorption, etc... the CC cable is going to measure far worse vs an optimal cable in all ways.
You can't tell me why you even think CC is that great, can you? I mean, besides your own subjective evaluation? And now they can't even be found anymore, so anyone who wants to be in the "natural, room-filling sound club" needs to acquire these mystical cables...
So you choose CC over everything else, not because it's better, but because you subjectively prefer it, that is the definition of tweaky! It can't be reproduced, it can't be bought again, if that's not tweaky, what is?
And yes, I do seem to prefer cables, and most other things audio, when they improve in objective terms. For example, my ribbon cables have very low inductance and I can hear that in power and speaker cable applications. It's a superior geometry vs what round wires can achieve in terms of LCR.
Hard to believe a cable, vacuum tube amplification and flawed-horn-speaker designer is here defending real engineering approaches to audio, maybe we need to give Amir a temporary reinstatement, lol...
Edit- To clarify Dave, I'm not inferring that CC is the better or worse sounding than yours or any other power cords, I'm disagreeing with your portrayal of them as a piece of junk.
I never said that. Again, you're mischaracterizing what I said. I said they are built to a price point and not specifically intended for audio applications. For just about everything else in the world, CC PC's are identical in performance to any other. Does your toast taste better with CC? More natural browning, a real-bread crust-feel to it?
EDIT: Let's consider the role of a regular PC. It should first and foremost not short out, and be able to be bent repeatedly and not be able to be kinked, and if a kink is forced, not to short out. It should be able to be stepped on, maybe even run over by a car, and not short out.
Everything else is secondary to that. In audio, we have different priorities.
I will agree with you on questionable designs that are not engineering based. For example I've seen power cables, right here on WBF, made using 12g solid-core wire. This can't be bent repeatedly without cracking and the resistance going up. Eventually there will be enough resistance to heat up and possibly short or start a fire. I think this is unacceptable. I also think design decisions that lead to corrosion of the cable because they think it's better subjectively are making poor decisions.