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9 votes
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What are your views on hydrogen powered vehicles?
Do you think they will be the next big thing, or end up being impractical in the long run?
8 votes -
Ignoring initial construction costs, what takes less of a toll on the environment: a human-powered bike or an electric bike?
What’s up tildorans, This is more of a thought experiment then anything else, is the impact of consuming calories more or less impactful then producing the electricity needed to power the bike?...
What’s up tildorans, This is more of a thought experiment then anything else, is the impact of consuming calories more or less impactful then producing the electricity needed to power the bike? And I also understand this is extremely affected by circumstance. Let’s say you eat beef 3 times a day and live in a part of the world where power is mostly generated via nuclear or hydroelectric. At that point, would the impact via electricity be less then the one via calories? What if you flip the spectrum and you’re a vegan living somewhere that produces all its energy via coal and oil, how does that affect the equation? Thanks
5 votes -
Chevy Volt discontinued: Chevrolet's last Volt rolls off the assembly line
22 votes -
Waymo are making their lidar available to companies outside of self-driving
4 votes -
Apple lays off 200 employees working on self-driving cars
13 votes -
Tesla launches long-awaited standard Model 3 starting at $35,000
29 votes -
As more electric cars arrive, what's the future for gas-powered engines?
19 votes -
Sentry mode: Guarding your Tesla
5 votes -
Self-driving cars: Navigating the hype
4 votes -
Death and valor on a warship doomed by its own Navy - An investigation into the crash of the USS Fitzgerald
6 votes -
Machu Picchu now wheelchair accessible
9 votes -
No, Elon, the Navigate on Autopilot feature is not ‘full self-driving’
11 votes -
Tesla’s driver fatality rate is more than triple that of luxury cars (and likely even higher)
12 votes -
Sydney's driverless Metro completes first full run on NorthWest corridor
6 votes -
My colleague designed/engineered a hydraulic "Drop Down Truck" for wheelchair users
10 votes -
Formula E starts season five in Saudi Arabia with a faster electric race car
7 votes -
A slashed tire, a pointed gun, bullies on the road: Why do Waymo self-driving vans get so much hate?
18 votes -
We finally talked to an actual Waymo passenger—here’s what he told us
11 votes -
Seeing issues with self-driving cars
5 votes -
Elon Musk says Tesla came "within single-digit weeks" of death
12 votes -
China is crushing Europe's electric car dreams
9 votes -
Inside Tesla’s factory, a medical clinic designed to ignore injured workers
15 votes -
Waymo has been granted the first permit in California to begin driverless testing on public roads
7 votes -
Tesla shares jump by more than 12% after surprise third-quarter profit that beats Wall Street expectations
17 votes -
Did Uber steal Google’s intellectual property?
7 votes -
Tesla's Model 3 is becoming one of America's best-selling sedans
15 votes -
Tesla shares are soaring. Five experts weigh in on what comes next.
8 votes -
Elon Musk is his own worst enemy
13 votes -
Taken for a ride: MD injured in ATV crash gets $56,603 bill for US air ambulance trip
13 votes -
John Deere blocks farmer's right to repair
39 votes -
Kalashnikov takes on Tesla with retro-look electric 'supercar'
12 votes -
Security research underway to ensure you will not be carjacked by hackers
4 votes -
Dugout Loop
3 votes -
Saudi fund in talks to invest in Tesla buyout deal
4 votes -
Why American farmers are hacking their tractors with Ukrainian firmware
12 votes -
Elon Musk’s Tesla funding wasn’t quite ‘secured’ after all
9 votes -
Elon Musk announces plan to open source part of Tesla's vehicle security software
7 votes -
Why Tesla stock skyrocketed and got halted - Elon Musk is "considering" taking Tesla private in a $70 billion deal
12 votes -
Telsa unveils internally developed neural network accelerator chip and drop in replacement for existing Nvidia solution
4 votes -
Inside the life of the world's first self-driving teen
8 votes -
Cleveland Browns' QBs have an RV HQ, called the Shark
6 votes -
Tesla whistleblower countersues over Elon Musk’s ‘defamatory’ statements
5 votes -
DIY ROV
Months ago I decided I was going to build my own underwater remotely-operated vehicle. I got sidetracked by a kitchen remodel, but since it is now complete I will have some free time to start...
Months ago I decided I was going to build my own underwater remotely-operated vehicle. I got sidetracked by a kitchen remodel, but since it is now complete I will have some free time to start working on my vehicle. There are some decent videos out there where others have done the same thing, some are wildly complicated and others are basically built from items out of a scrap bin. I am hoping to land somewhere in the middle.
During the bit of research I have performed, I discovered companies selling very high-end parts, the likes of which you would find on a highly funded/sponsored deep sea expedition or a government project. I didn't find a whole lot of middle ground really, either you DIY or you dump a ton of money into it.
My plan is to use PVC for my hull. I had thought about constructing it similar to the Russian Typhoon-class submarine, with two pressure hulls within an outer hull. That would allow the electrics to reside in dry compartments while I use the void space for ballast. I even found RC submarine ballast systems on eBay which would allow me to take on water and dump it remotely so I could trim it out on the fly.
The general opinion, I have discovered so far, is to make it neutrally buoyant. As much as I would like to add that ballast tank system I may need to just keep it simple for my first attempt. Tethers also seem to be an issue, adding too much weight when they get to a certain length and if you do not take steps to make them buoyant. I thought pool noodles, but learned from someone else that they become water logged and are a bad choice. Then there is power, the trend I noticed is keeping it onboard in the form of a battery pack, but I would like to keep it ashore and just add a wire to the tether so I can not have power to worry about.
So far I have an Arduino board, some old laptops, and some rivers to explore. If we had a makerspace or hackerspace nearby I would be all set. I did search, and the closest is an hour away, which is disappointing since I know I am not the only person into ridiculous projects/hobbies around here! Anyone on here into things like this?
8 votes -
George Hotz is on a hacker crusade against the "scam" of self-driving cars
6 votes -
SpaceX is building a ‘kid-sized submarine’ to rescue trapped soccer team
17 votes -
Driverless cars could make our roads safer and reduce congestion. But the algorithms driving them will also have to make life-or-death decisions.
10 votes -
Elon Musk ordered Tesla engineers to stop doing a critical brake test on Model 3s
11 votes -
Tesla hits Model 3 manufacturing milestone, hours after deadline
23 votes -
Tesla sues former employee for allegedly stealing gigabytes of data, making false claims to media
16 votes