The PSC01 looks like a good choice to plug into the one switched outlet on the receiver, but it outputs 120V. Input voltage on the PSC01 is 0-18V.
How about a long extension cord from the recevers switched outlet?
Hey, you laugh, but....
I had a guy run speaker wire from the front of the room to the side half way down the wall. He was able to carefully pull the curved baseboard off, slide the cable between wall and floor, and put baseboard back. We would have ran power too, but there was no room.
The relay is interesting. I have soldering skills, but I have not used a relay before. The two terminals in the same direction are where the A/C wires attach and the other terminals are the relays, the low voltage side? The one says DPDT but has 6 terminals. I thought it would be 4, 2 for each throw.
The trickle saver is a good idea, but seems to require a power cord between the receiver and woofer. Back to the extension cord idea. The only thing between the two right now other than an audio cable is the A/C cable in the wall. Plus, not sure how well things will run running a high power receiver, and 2 large subs through a single outlet.
I had the nstinct's predecessor. Nice remote. I didn't use it much because I used the system to watch movies on a PS3. The PS3 does not have IR and is controlled via bluetooth. There are IR adapters for it, but you can't power it on via IR plugged into USB. So, I end up going to the front of the room to power the PS3 on and the receiver manually since it's right there. Very rarely do I power the receiver on via a remote. You do have me thinking about this though... hmm, maybe controlling the outlets with a SS13A switch. The only down side is the fact the subwoofers on/off correlate directly with the on/off of the receiver, no matter how it's powered, remote or not. A separate switch is one more thing to push.
Just to finish a story, I gave the remote to my parents to consolidate remotes. They love it. One remote to rule them all.