It's my thought that isolation of inputs is almost never needed. Fender, and nearly every other mfg have had many, many years of amps that run quiet, with their jacks installed in 3/8" holes, in normal contact with the chassis. some have a second ground contact via the sleeve lug, some not. All are very quiet. As an example, I have a 70's super reverb, that had a bad hum when I got it. One of the 100ohm filament circuit balance resistors had burned open. Replacing that with a pair of new ones stopped the hum, and I've never heard a whisper of hum from it since. (The hissy Carbon comp resistors are another story)
I see guys with concern about "ground loops". I believe ground loops are a concern when they are large, like a common ground on inputs of two amps that also are grounded via power cords. That could create quite a huge antenna that picks up 60hz in walls around it. A loop of a few inches inside a chassis has never been an issue for me. Several feet of cords are a large antenna, and a low value resistance as well.
I have had to isolate a few jacks, where I've replaced marshall type jacks with switchcraft. Possibly, it was not needed in most of those cases, but I was attempting to copy the original hookup. I have amps that are point to point, with each terminal strip providing it's own lug for grounding of that stage, or using a center post of the sockets as a grounding point, with a wire running from there to any convenient chassis solder point, or a screw. These amps are also very quiet unless something else is wrong. Fenders very likely didn't have a hum from the factory, and I've never seen factory isolated jacks in one.
Just my two cents,
Jim