If balanced audio isn't being used over any sort of distance then its amateur hour.Beyond that for analog line level audio/video transport use balanced signals or optical.
The IG form of grounding is only intended to be used as a possible means of obtaining common-mode electrical-noise rejection on the circuit which it is used. It has no other purpose and its effects are variable. It cannot remove any noise from a circuit as it has no active or reactive components.This was common practice for years, the purpose being to lower the ground voltage differences between widely separated locations. This is the brute-force method, and is only moderately successful.
The isolated ground scheme is to avoid shared impedance, to avoid sharing a ground path with an electrically noisy, high leakage device not related to the AV system.
The IG form of grounding is only intended to be used as a possible means of obtaining common-mode electrical-noise rejection on the circuit which it is used. It has no other purpose and its effects are variable. It cannot remove any noise from a circuit as it has no active or reactive components.
I understand that perfectly, I even wrote the section in the Emerald book that addresses IGR, but the very equipment affected and their L-N conductors are the cause/source of the of the leakage. It can certainly be compounded by daisy chaining with multiple drops, or running with other none sensitive equipment power and lighting circuits, but still the very equipment you are trying to isolate is guilty.IG is not about what happens in the CCCs and can't affect noise on them. It is about leakage currents into the ground from devices not associated with the "sensitive" circuits.
The leakage comes from one main component; the unbalanced architecture of the single phase 120 volt circuit with line being referenced to ground. This causes capacitive coupling of 60 Hz current into the EGC when ran with their circuit conductors.
By using an isolated EGC only bonded only and the N-G bond instead of using the lower impedance ground plane of the conduit and building only mitigates the problem.
One is using a completely different power architecture ... balanced power
The second method used is just a good ole fashioned isolation transformer
However today it is becoming a moot point because IGR is antiquated because most all low level signal transmission is now being done with balanced signals, digital, and optical transmission methods.
This was common practice for years, the purpose being to lower the ground voltage differences between widely separated locations. This is the brute-force method, and is only moderately successful.
The isolated ground scheme is to avoid shared impedance, to avoid sharing a ground path with an electrically noisy, high leakage device not related to the AV system. In this it is very successful and should continue to be used.
Upsizing the ECG is a little more vain, when one looks at impedance vs frequency. Of far greater importance is to not generate voltage onto the EGC by the physical relationships between it and the CCCs. Loose singles in conduit is the worst, and twisting the CCCs together and running the isolated ground separately in the same conduit is best.There is a longer explanation in my post near the bottom of this thread
http://forums.mikeholt.com/showthread.php?t=119126