Hello dpc
I agree with you.
I always shake my head when I see those "special" grounds, like in the special olympics. When you ponder the grounding of the main system that may have hundreds of feet of buried cable ringing the facility, multiple ufer grounds, and the capacity to safely ground thousands of amps of ground current those "Dedicated instrument grounds" look pretty Mickey Mouse. I never worried about them though because when we installed the 4/0 jumper from the instrument ground bus to the main ground bus as per code, the instrument system had a good ground.
It is regretable, but over the years, I have seen electronics engineers, comunications engineers and computer engineers show an unprofessional contempt for power engineering. In regards to grounding in particular, they don't understand grounding systems and the normally expected characteristics of a ground system under fault conditions. And they don't ask an expert because they don't know they don't know. There seems to be an assumption that if you know electronics and data systems that 60 hz power are so simple that you can just put a ground symbol on a drawing and magically you have connected your circuit to an infinite common point. (end of rant)
I am glad to see that 02101972 is asking. This is an intelligent and professional approach.
Respectfully