InCali
My Buddy - Max the Dog
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I know this doesn't sound nerdy at all , but while electricity itself doesn't smell, high voltages traveling through the air, like a lightning storm, can actually ionize oxygen (O2 molecules) basically tearing them apart. They then try to bond with something; often other O2 molecules. This creates an O3 molecule which is otherwise known as ozone. You've probably smelled it before. It has kind of a bleachy, burny smell to it. So, it certainly gives the impression that electricity can have a smell. It certainly can create one.Voters consistently vote for the candidate they would like to have a beer with.
I can't criticize, because that is the same process I used in selecting my cardiologist.
If you think about it, ANY odor, by definition, is something given off by the object and not the object itself, so, in a way, you could argue that electricity "can" smell like something;