I have an Electrical Contracting Co. and made a service call today to diagnose an open ground situation on one circuit in the Den area. I started at the first box where the home run lands and worked my way to the last receptacle. Found one that needed replacing as it had come apart. There is No grounding conductor just the grounded conductor. The house was built in 1972 but the wiring was romex with grounds and those are tied in with the neutrals in every box along with ground clips attached to the boxes which are metal. Now keep in mind too that the original panel is in the garage with a 200 amp MCB with all neutrals/ grounds connected together as a primary panel. Then someone came in and added a new exterior service panel with feed through lugs to feed the panel in the garage and neutrals/grounds tied together. I was actually there to originally install a ground bar and isolate the sub panel neutral bar. But no ground pulled to the sub. So that needs to be done but a long way from the exterior panel... so another project for another day soon. But here's where it gets interesting. They have a sound board/system and a lot of computer equipment for making music. So I started isolating the equipment. I found that when I plug their mixing board into the outlet ( powered off) that corrects the open ground on my tester and reads "correct", unplug it and it shows back to open ground. Electrically everything checked out with all receptacles. Anybody have any idea as to what is going on here?