There are several posts on the Gon dealing with this question. The gist of it is: Dedicated circuit --good, secondary ground - bad. Reason: a difference in potential between the two grounds; which not only can create a current in the grounding system, but also creates a ground "loop" which causes hum problems.
I live in Tucson, AZ, the lightening capitol of the world (maybe the universe!) My solution was to insert a high-speed diode from the "house" side of my dedicated circuit breaker(s) to ground inside the panel. The slightest surge will short the breaker to ground thru the diode and trip it (frying the diode!) before any current can get to your stuff.
I live in Tucson, AZ, the lightening capitol of the world (maybe the universe!) My solution was to insert a high-speed diode from the "house" side of my dedicated circuit breaker(s) to ground inside the panel. The slightest surge will short the breaker to ground thru the diode and trip it (frying the diode!) before any current can get to your stuff.