"The trick to eliminate ground loops is to run all of the lines powering your equipment to the same phase (leg) of ground in your fuse box. It is also a good idea to isolate all of the "noisy" lines on the other phase from your equipment. Your electrician should understand this readily."
Understood. However, in the configuration I've detailed above...wouldn't the fact that I'd have interconnected equipment (via the metal equipment rack) on a mixture of a branch circuit plus dedicated curcuits still not cause an issue?
The existing branch circuit (which will continue to feed the cable box installed in the rack, the plasma TV in the other room, the wall wart devices, etc.) is terminated and grounded at the main panel 80 feet away. The dedicated lines would terminate, and I assume be grounded at, a subpanel less than 10 feet away.
I understand that the subpanel itself is then grounded back to the main panel, but wouldn't I still essentially end up with interconnected components (via the rack) sharing two different circuits...circuits that are initally gounded at two different places? If so, wouldn't this establish a large ground loop?
As far using the same phase or leg is concerned...as long as I tie the sub panel to the same leg that the branch cucuit is on, will everything in the sub panel then be on the same leg? Or should I alternately space the wiring(i.e., skip a breaker row) within the sub panel?
Understood. However, in the configuration I've detailed above...wouldn't the fact that I'd have interconnected equipment (via the metal equipment rack) on a mixture of a branch circuit plus dedicated curcuits still not cause an issue?
The existing branch circuit (which will continue to feed the cable box installed in the rack, the plasma TV in the other room, the wall wart devices, etc.) is terminated and grounded at the main panel 80 feet away. The dedicated lines would terminate, and I assume be grounded at, a subpanel less than 10 feet away.
I understand that the subpanel itself is then grounded back to the main panel, but wouldn't I still essentially end up with interconnected components (via the rack) sharing two different circuits...circuits that are initally gounded at two different places? If so, wouldn't this establish a large ground loop?
As far using the same phase or leg is concerned...as long as I tie the sub panel to the same leg that the branch cucuit is on, will everything in the sub panel then be on the same leg? Or should I alternately space the wiring(i.e., skip a breaker row) within the sub panel?