Yikes! a topic like this certainly brings out a lot of ... stuff.
It is this simple:
1) the house wiring should be to code2) you will not experience a ground loop unless your equipment has a grounding problem.
Despite an enormous amount of information available, an amazing amount of 'high end' audio manufacturers exercise poor grounding technique in their products (put another way: don't know what they are doing). If the chassis and circuit ground are the same thing, that causes the device to be vulnerable to ground loops introduced externally (IOW, from other equipment).
If adding alternate grounding systems causes an improvement, its a good sign that equipment in your system employs a poor grounding scheme.
It is this simple:
1) the house wiring should be to code2) you will not experience a ground loop unless your equipment has a grounding problem.
Despite an enormous amount of information available, an amazing amount of 'high end' audio manufacturers exercise poor grounding technique in their products (put another way: don't know what they are doing). If the chassis and circuit ground are the same thing, that causes the device to be vulnerable to ground loops introduced externally (IOW, from other equipment).
If adding alternate grounding systems causes an improvement, its a good sign that equipment in your system employs a poor grounding scheme.