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You have to be very careful when discussing "ground". For instance, the neutral wire is connected to earth ground at the breaker box (as is the so-called "ground" wire). Therefore, even gear with two prong plugs is grounded to earth ground. This means that the neutral prong connects your gear to the "outside world".
http://www.audioholics.com/education/cables/debunking-the-myth-of-speaker-cable-resonanceA small dose of measurement trumps myth in my book.
I don't understand what you are saying if one is isolated they all should be. If you have one unit that has signal gnd connected to earth say a pre. Won't this connect the whole chain to earth? Maybe I am missing the point.
Altho it's no help w/ ground loops, shielded cables go a long way toward rejecting the dreaded RF/RFI which can be found in the heart of the Amazon rain forest to the corn fields of Iowa & the wheat fields of Kansas, Toto. Altho it goes against the audiophile bible, there are excellent shielded cables.
Do you always build with double insulation standards? If not, you are inviting yourself to a lawsuit. Its one thing for a DIYer to risk their own skin and another for a manufacturer to intentionally violate safety standards.Look up grounding by Dan Banquer. Kris's suggestions seems to conform with this principle and is in compliance with safety standards.
......Another fact: All step up and step down transformers inside your electronics appliances can be thought of as isolation transformers. The only thing connecting your gear to the outside world is the ground wire. There is a considerable amount of electronic gear made without an external ground system (two prong plug instead of three).
The silly thing about isolation transformers is that they have ground wires. Well- that bridges both sides of the so-called isolation transformer and it's now useless.
Important: If one device in your system is 100% isolated, make sure everything that is connected to it is 100% isolated form the mains as well. If not, it could be dangerous and/or you will be defeating the purpose of total isolation.
Whatever you do, you do at your own risk. I am just relaying some facts and information and not providing hook up data.
This whole notice can be summarized: Ground systems are not always noise sinks. In fact, they can be resonant at certain frequencies and pick up noise. A good read: http://www.industrialcontroldesignline.com/howto/212501871