For sure. They can be a nightmare. Here are some tidbits for you to ponder. Perhaps one of them will offer a clue to explaining some of your past observations:I would love to unravel this whole power cord mess
* Power cords are usually unshielded two or three conductor cables. They are excellent antennas for radiating noise above 30 MHz. They conduct noise from low-freq power line harmonics up through hundreds of MHz in either direction.
* Power cords are hard to shield. You can buy a foil-shielded cable but it has unpredictable results. There's no good low-impedance metal connector on the ends like a signal cable, plus there's no shielding on the house wiring anyway (steel conduit might help). The safety 'green wire' is poor for RF termination. Shielded cords lower the cords impedance and actually make it act like a transmission line to conduct the noise at high frequencies.
* Equipment design affects power cord noise. Good equipment uses a shielded, filtered IEC male plug on the back with a detachable cord. Look for a metal can around the power connector. Cheaper stuff uses no filter component shielding, and EMI filter components are exposed inside the equipment or supply. Cheaper equipment may just barely meet limits, and could exceed under various cabling configurations.
* Noise coming out on the line cord is broadband power supply switching noise, and current switching harmonics of digital logic passed through from the DC load side.
* Changing the impedance to ground at the line cord plug can greatly affect radiation off the cord. A power conditioner/filter might have a low output impedance with capacitance to ground or high output impedance with series inductance. Either way, the line cord's inductance is part of an L-C circuit. Moving the line cord changes the inductance, and moves around the resonant frequencies. It is possible for a line conditioner to affect the system, not by filtering noise coming through on the power but by providing a different source impedance at the plug which in turn changes how it radiates to other cables. You've basically isolated all the inductance of your house wiring at the same time.
* All it takes is one noisy piece of equipment and line cord to trash all the other cords and signal cables in a system.
* It is good to keep all your signal cables as far away from line cords as possible. Segregate them, bundle all excess cable length to reduce radiation pick-up or radiation.
* Wrapping a noisy power cord, or a sensitive signal cable around a ferrite core (toroid) or clamping on a split toroid can sometimes help attenuate common-mode noise, if it exists.
Hope the above might help explain some of the voodoo. Some things help a lot and they are cheap.
emc guy