Not that I would throw water on anything electrically energized, but I’m going to be a damp rag for a minute …

Are you saying that the miles of wire between your gear and where the power is generated are all OK, but the power cord is causing deficient sound?

Or are you saying that there could be loads of problems, including problem loads, near and far in the miles of connections on the line between your gear and where the power is generated, but changing the power cord will overshadow all that?

Or are you saying that the engineers at Outlaw and their contractors’ engineers, some of those folks being highly specialized, spent thousands of work hours to design some of the best audio equipment in its price range, but the engineers decided an inferior power cord was OK? Or perhaps it was the people running the business that decided to place their investment of heart, time and much money at risk by including a power cord that would reduce the output quality of Outlaw equipment?

If you suspect that there is a problem getting power delivered from your circuit breaker panel to your equipment, most likely having someone A) check the ‘solidness’ and ‘correctness’ of the wiring and replacing the outlet for the cost of labor plus $5 or less in parts (so that the contacts in the wall are clean with a good ‘grip’ when you insert your new equipment’s original power cord), or B) look for items plugged in that might be introducing electrical noise on your circuit(s) and verifying that the wiring on that circuit is conducting properly, is a much better idea than spending $$$ on a few feet of hyped wire between the wall plug and your gear.