Over a longer period of time, I got some power supplies, from different sources, that are supposed to be used with small (Mini-ITX) cases. The external part is a power brick with a DC output of 12 V (some use 19 V or more). Inside the case is a small PCB, which creates the other voltages needed (5 V, 3.3V,...). These come either already installed with the case or can be bought separately.
Both parts are connected using a regular barrel jack (5.5/2.5) on the backside of the case, which is connected internally to the mentioned PCB. The PCB itself provides the ATX connector(s) usually needed.
The barrel connector has 3 contacts: tip, sleeve and insertion detection. Insertion detection is connected to sleeve as long as no plug is disconnected. If a plug gets connected, the insertion detection pin is mechanically disconnected from the sleeve.
Now the weird thing is, that all these PSU combos use a green/yellow wire that is connected to this insertion detection pin and are supposed to (or simply are) connected to the metal case. But I don't understand why? I would understand, if this wire would be permanently connected to the sleeve, for a better GND/earth connection to the case, but this way it actually gets disconnected when the plug is inserted. In the end, it doesn't matter, since DC GND is connected to PE/Earth anyway through the power brick and the standoffs of the PCB. But there are multiple devices that do this, so I don't think it's a mistake of a single device.
What could be the reason for this connection?