If he is floating the scope ground (why!?!)
I've always been told to flote the oscilloscope ground, especially if I'm
- measuring with multiple grounds and I'm not sure if they are connected
- measuring voltage above 50 V
- combining low voltage (e.g. using probe x100) and PCB measurements
You have been told a lot of
absolute rubbish in multiple ways.
Some is dangerous rubbish. Is that perfectly clear?
I suggest you have look at the references in
https://entertaininghacks.wordpress.com/library-2/scope-probe-reference-material/ Those will help you understand
- why your techniques are dangerous - to your scope, to you, and to anybody else in the vicinity
- what class of probe you need to use for different measurements
Hopefully you will then be able to stop using
"cargo cult engineering".
EDIT: sorry I was so curt, but the
way you have approached dangerous voltages put the wind up me.
There is no substitute for educating oneself from solid reliable sources of information; these are exceptionally easily accessible nowadays, unlike last century. Relying on yootoob vids from random kiddies, or people you chat to over the garden wall is a bad starting point.
The point is not to follow recipes blindly, but to understand why the recipes work. If you can't understand why a recipe works, then it might be that it is merely a "leg of lamb story"[1]. At the very least, compare and contrast multiple recipes for a range of very different sources to get a feel for which "cook" understands and which cook repeats what they do not understand. Deciding which is which is a key skill nowadays.
[1] Child: "Mummy, why do you cut off the end of the leg of lamb before roasting it"?
Mother: "That's the way granny did it when I was young".
Child: "But why?"
Mother: "Go and ask her!"
Child: "Granny, why did you cut off the end of the leg of lamb before roasting it"?
Grandmother, looks puzzled for 30s, then "Oh yes, because we had a small oven and I had to do that to get it to fit in".