Thanks I thought you did not comment because I did not check ground at breaker correctly.I looked at your photo #35. Kind of hard to see with my 66 yo eyes. It seems to be moderately newer panel. If main panel the ground and neutral should be bonded together. If you are getting 120v at the breaker to the ground/neutral bar then that is correct.
I am starting to lose the meaning of this thread.
These circuits look newer. They should have grounds on them. How many wires does the incoming cable have in a receptacle box. If it is 3 total (one hot - usually black, one neutral = usually white and one bare ground) then your circuit is grounded. You should get 120v from hot to neutral and from hot to ground. If using a plastic box you can use the self-grounding receptacle but you will still have to run a ground wire from the ground on the incoming cable to the receptacle because again the plastic box is nonconductive so self grounding receptacle will do nothing in this case. Also be sure you bound all ground wires together in the box.
I tried to find ground screw inside panel but I could not that is why I checked at ground/neutral combo bar. I hope that is the correct way to check ground at breaker ..if not correct let me know how else I should check for ground at breaker?
Yes panel is newer - but I believe at that time previous owner did not spend money to change the wiring so wiring is still old type of wiring which is only 2 cable and fabric type of sheathing - no bare wire in other words ground wire but at least once circuit i.e bathroom when I removed drywall I saw they have used metal water supply line as ground because a separate ground wire is connected to that circuit connected to those metal pipes.
You are right the thread has lost its main objective...I have moved on from self grounding outlet to a question that can solve problem of not having ground at couple of circuits.