Can a power cord increase the resolution of an Class D (SMPS) amp by more than 5% ?


5% in relation to a stock power cord.

I can’t really trust dealer comments. I am more interested in reports from audiophiles. 
Whats your story? Did you manage to increase speed and resolution of your amp ? (without losses in the bass area)
128x128zuio
Say, itsn’t Ralph the guy who’s got some weird theory that fuse holders cause fuse directionality, not the fuse itself? Come on people! Give me a break! When are you going to wake up and smell the coffee? ☕️

I see nobody has answered my pop quiz, which audio cables are not (rpt not) operating in an AC circuit. Not even the illustrious Ralph. 
I am wondering where Elizabeth is getting her numbers from 2% not 5% for a power cord.
% of what. You might be able to say that in your opinion an upgrade in speakers sounded 2x better than what you had. Even Audioquest cannot give you a persentage of improvement from one cable to the next. They just say the more expensive the better the sound. Does a Audioquest Redwood give you a 27% better sound quality than an Aspen? Most people in a blind test cannot tell a $300 power cable from an $1,800 cable. Yet people described the difference like one French wine from a CA

I would like Liz to respond and here her comments 
Any frequency other than zero Hz is AC, in that the direction of the current alternates at some rate. Digital signals and analog audio signals both contain a mix of many non-zero frequency components that are simultaneously present. Certain digital signals may have a significant DC component in addition to their AC frequency components, an example being USB signals which have one of their two voltage states at or near zero, and the other at some positive voltage. But a signal having both DC and AC components is nevertheless "operating in an AC circuit," it seems to me.

So the only audio-related cables I can think of which are "not operating in an AC circuit" are cables conducting the outputs of DC power supplies that are external to the component being powered.

Regards,
-- Al