Installation of new AC lines......best way to ground to avoid loops and noise


I plan on installing dedicated (new breaker box near stereo) lines. I already have the AC plugs and am most concerned about configuring the best grounding system. I use single ended interconnects. Any advice would be very appreciated.
audition__audio
The worst source of hum and main thing to avoid is plugging components into different legs. The three utility cables coming into the box are two hot leads and one utility neutral or ground wire. To this you add one earth ground. The two rows of breakers in the box, each row connects to one of the hot legs. Whichever leg you use, make sure all your system components connect to that leg. Single most important thing you can do.

The above can be done with as many circuits as you want. Next step up from this is to run only one circuit sized to power the whole system, with only the conditioner plugged into it and everything running off the conditioner. This leaves you one unconditioned outlet to plug in the occasional extra item, compare conditioned vs unconditioned power, etc.

The next step up from this is to drive an extra ground rod dedicated to the one system circuit. By this point though you are really splitting hairs or getting into a realm where details matter. Like it may make a big improvement, little or none, or maybe even be a little worse. At this level you start to discover things you never were aware of before, like some manufacturers don't even use that third ground- oh they may use a three prong plug, but that third ground one isn't connected to anything! Floating ground they call it.

Now going even beyond this you get into things like cryogenic treatment. Which if you are going to do this do it now, way less work than pulling the wire and redoing. I'll give you one guess how I know that.... and yes it is worth the trouble. Or if you're confident and knowledgeable enough you can make your own fuse of pure cryogenically treated silver wire to eliminate the crappy circuit breakers altogether. But I would never do that. Oh no. Not me. Nor should you.

Okay I will stop here and let someone else tell you all about which connection conditioners to use.... 


Post removed 
millercarbon
The next step up from this is to drive an extra ground rod dedicated to the one system circuit.
Oh no, that's potentially lethal and an NEC code violation. All grounds must be bonded together with the neutral in the service panel. No exceptions.
@ jsautter


Mother earth does not posses some magical, mystical,  power that sucks nasties from an audio system


Grounding Myths

From Henry W. Ott’s big new book "Electromagnetic Compatibility Engineering"

3.1.7 Grounding Myths

More myths exist relating to the field of grounding than any other area of electrical engineering. The more common of these are as follows:

1. The earth is a low-impedance path for ground current. False, the impedance of the earth is orders of magnitude greater than the impedance of a copper conductor.

2. The earth is an equipotential. False, this is clearly not true by the result of (1 above).

3. The impedance of a conductor is determined by its resistance. False, what happened to the concept of inductive reactance?

4. To operate with low noise, a circuit or system must be connected to an earth ground. False, because airplanes, satellites, cars and battery powered laptop computers all operate fine without a ground connection. As a mater of fact, an earth ground is more likely to be the cause of noise problem. More electronic system noise problems are resolved by removing (or isolating) a circuit from earth ground than by connecting it to earth ground.

5. To reduce noise, an electronic system should be connected to a separate “quiet ground” by using a separate, isolated ground rod. False, in addition to being untrue, this approach is dangerous and violates the requirements of the NEC (electrical code/rules).

6. An earth ground is unidirectional, with current only flowing into the ground. False, because current must flow in loops, any current that flows into the ground must also flow out of the ground somewhere else.

7. An isolated AC power receptacle is not grounded. False, the term “isolated” refers only to the method by which a receptacle is grounded, not if it is grounded.

8. A system designer can name ground conductors by the type of the current that they should carry (i.e., signal, power, lightning, digital, analog, quiet, noisy, etc.), and the electrons will comply and only flow in the appropriately designated conductors. Obviously false."

Henry W. Ott