A 20-amp power cord must have 20-amp rated connectors on both sides along with #12 or larger conductors.
I would agree, for a 20 power cord.
If you have a cord that has #12 or larger conductors (or multiple conductors totaling over 12awg in area) but 15-amp connectors on either or both sides, it is still a 15-amp cord. Manufacturers usually call that a "high current" or "amplifier" cord but they cannot call it a 20-amp cord.
Again, I would agree with your above statement.
If your equipment -- like most equipment -- has a 15-amp connector (C-14 receptacle) then you cannot use a listed 20-amp cord because it will not fit.
And again I agree.
But what if the manufacture of a CDP installed a 20 amp IEC male connector on the back because he believes the 20 amp IEC connectors connection is better than a 15 amp IEC connectors and the FLA on the piece of equipment is, say, 2 amps.
If he supplies the power cord for the amp The IEC female connector will naturally be 20 amp and I can guarantee the male plug will be a NEMA 5-15P (15 amp) plug. The conductors of the cord who knows. Could be #14, it could be #16 gauge.
Because it has a 15 amp male plug, and the conductors are 16 gauge can you truly call that a 15 amp power cord?
See that’s the problem with IEC connectors. There isn’t any real standardization. They are not idiot proof.
What happens if the user someday finds it in his odds and ends box and uses it on a big Krell power amp, (he just bought used that didn’t come with a power cord), that has a 20 amp IEC connector on the back of it. Must be ok to use. It plugged in the back of the amp and the plug plugged into the wall 15 amp duplex receptacle. If the cord is 6ft long and the wire is 16 gauge because of the VD + heat that will be generated by the connected load to the hot and neutral conductors add that to a possibly long length of the in wall #14awg branch circuit wiring there is a chance the current passing through the 15 amp circuit breaker may be less than 15 amps. In that case the breaker could very well not trip open.
The power cord will not affect the power consumption or current draw of the amplifier. Your amplifier’s fuse will limit the current well below the 80% listed amp threshold for the power cord.
Well not in the sense power consumption meaning it can deliver more power than the branch circuit can deliver but it is possible depending on the wire size used in the cord and the connected load VD, voltage drop, could be a factor, there in limiting power to an amplifier. Even if the fuse is a slow blow 8 amp fuse it will easily pass short spurts of current draw well exceeding the fuse’s 8 amp rating if the power amp is being driven hard playing high dynamic music.
Best regards,
Jim

