But how do you keep the bad sounding electrons from the power grid from leaking back into the audio equipment?
Is there a bad electron - good electron gate available?
I know in WWII at Oak Ridge it took many square miles of industrial buildings to separate good Uranium from bad Uranium atoms via the gassous diffusion project. I know about the project because I grew up there. My father was in charge of designing and starting up the whole school system for the huge influx of workers.
The morale was terrible there. At all the other war plants in the USA people went to work, and out came tanks, airplanes, munitions, etc. At Oak Ridge all kinds of stuff kept coming in, but NOTHING AT ALL CAME OUT! It was pretty scary. My dad thought they were developing a death ray maybe, nobody knew anything. The main thing I learned there was a genuine Tennessee hillbilly speaking accent, right up there with Bill Elliot of NASCAR fame. When we moved to Milwaukee after the end of the war, the school system got one listen to me talking, "hits a good day don't ya know" and put me in the retard class right away. I barely escaped.
Regards,
Frank Van Alstine
P.S. They only made about 22 pounds of weapons grade Uranium during WWII at Oak Ridge, enough for only one bomb and bit more. That is why the first "test" was on Hiroshima, they "knew" the Uranium design would work and did not have enough material to test one first. The Plutonium bomb was a bit more iffy, easier to get the necessary material, a lot harder to make it work, and they did test that one first.