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I'm not sure I follow your reasoning. The ground in a power conditioner is generally straight through. Its only additional series resistance are those stemming from whatever additional connections, IEC inlet, outlets, etc....
Insofar as as all our components are all UL class 2, or we galvanically isolate all our signal grounds via signal transformers, this is true. But as soon as a single component has its signal/power ground tied to a grounded chassis (for extremely important safety reasons) we have that original problem of differing ground potentials.
So, if you were going to wire a room (basement in my case) for audio and video and you want at least two 15 amp lines (maybe three for amps) what is the best way to wire?
.The electrican that is running 2 hots, 1 neutral and 1 ground is just saving himself some work. He will have to use a heavier guage wire as the shared neutral and ground will have to handle the current load for both of the circuits. W
I recently ran two dedicated lines to my system i used 10gauge romex 3 wire and used a common ground but i used two separate breakers for the hot legs so i could keep them in phase with each other.
First, there are no "local electic codes" other than where smoke detectors and things like that are located. There is one amendment however, and that is that many urban areas require all wiring to be run in conduit like commercial codes require this as an additional fire protection feature. The National Electric Code stipulates all wiring methods for residential dwellings.