-
29 votes
-
Sergey Brin's airship gets US FAA clearance
27 votes -
Amtrak completes $11.6 million Wilmington, Delaware station renovations
14 votes -
Study: Yes, SUVs are deadlier than sedans — but on fast arterials, pedestrians die no matter what
38 votes -
Who gets peace and quiet?: The dangers of urban noise
23 votes -
State of EVs in Fall 2023?
My RSS reader has turned up a lot of pessimistic articles about the state of EVs in the last few days, for example:...
My RSS reader has turned up a lot of pessimistic articles about the state of EVs in the last few days, for example:
https://www.thedrive.com/news/gm-is-stalling-ev-production-because-demand-is-falling-off
https://www.thedrive.com/news/gm-delays-expanded-silverado-ev-production-orion-assembly-by-year
https://techcrunch.com/2023/10/17/gm-delays-4b-ev-truck-factory-plan-by-another-year/
https://techxplore.com/news/2023-10-vietnam-vinfast-struggles-electric-cars.html
Caught this YouTube video also:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cZlsZwcIgpc
Because of the car industry's obsession with XXL vehicles, Australia is thinking about increasing the size of the standard parking space
meanwhile, given a choice, consumers are snapping up the reasonably sized and highly efficient (40mpg!) Ford Maverick
maybe those American consumers might desire a bigger truck but they can afford that one.
When I read between the lines I'm inclined to think that there isn't any shortage of interest in EVs, but there is a shortage of interest in $80,000 EVs because very few people can afford them. What are you seeing in your neck of the woods? What intervention can you imagine that would help get the industry come to its senses?
31 votes -
Ford, UAW negotiators reach labor deal, pending union leadership approval
7 votes -
California DMV immediately suspends Cruise’s robotaxi permit
26 votes -
Toyota inks deal to mass produce solid state EV batteries with 932-mile range
46 votes -
US pedestrian deaths are soaring. Is it time to ban right turns on red lights?
76 votes -
Kansas City receives $15 billion in federal funding for mobility and infrastructure projects
13 votes -
Personal aviation is about to get interesting
20 votes -
Mumbai bids farewell to beloved double-decker buses made famous by Bollywood films
10 votes -
First woman to lead Germany’s biggest union takes aim at Tesla
15 votes -
Speed cameras are coming to the car capital of America
19 votes -
Stop blocking the aisle: how to board an aircraft
11 votes -
Biking the goods: How North American cities can prepare for and promote large-scale adoption of cargo e-bikes
8 votes -
What to expect when expecting electric airplanes
12 votes -
Germany’s terrible trains are no joke for a nation built on efficiency
23 votes -
Air travel is profoundly bad for the environment but one of the hardest industries to decarbonize. Can green technologies make a difference before it’s too late?
https://www.noemamag.com/the-seductive-vision-of-green-aviation/ Picture yourself in an airship pushing into the northern latitudes. From the vantage of a barstool in the center of a luxurious...
https://www.noemamag.com/the-seductive-vision-of-green-aviation/
Picture yourself in an airship pushing into the northern latitudes. From the vantage of a barstool in the center of a luxurious lounge, you look through panoramic windows to see an Arctic vista scroll past. The ride is as smooth as a cruise liner cutting through a mirror sea. Above you is a white canopy, the base of the great bladder of gas keeping you airborne. Down below, a huge oval shadow glides across the pack ice.
I disembarked from this flight of fancy and came back to reality in an industrial estate on the outskirts of the town of Bedford, a couple hours north of London. For now, the airship of my imagination sat disassembled in front of me — an engine, the top section of a tail fin, a salubrious sample cabin.
Hybrid Air Vehicles calls it the Airlander: a colossal, state-of-the-art dirigible that was originally conceived as a military surveillance platform for the U.S. Air Force. That idea was scrapped as America de-escalated its operations in Afghanistan, but by then a new application for airships was emerging. Aviation is the most energy-intensive form of transport, and in recent years the industry has come under intense scrutiny for its environmental footprint. Unlike a passenger airplane, a passenger airship — buoyant and slow — doesn’t have to burn much fuel to stay in the air.
“We’ve completely normalized flying in an aluminum tube at 500 miles an hour, but I think we’ve got some big changes coming,” said Tom Grundy, an aerospace engineer and HAV’s CEO, who was showing me around the research facility.
Many of the scientific principles behind Grundy’s airship are a throwback to a bygone age, when Goodyears and Zeppelins carried affluent clientele around America and Europe and occasionally between the two. Other aspects are cutting-edge. The cambered twin hulls will be inflated with 1.2 million cubic feet of inert helium, not flammable hydrogen like most of the Airlander’s interwar forebears. The skin, a composite of tenacious, space-age materials, is barely a tenth of an inch thick but so strong that there is no need for any internal skeleton. Grundy handed me a handkerchief-sized off-cut. “You could probably hang an SUV off that,” he said. When it goes into production later this year, it will be the world’s largest commercial airliner: around 300 feet long, nearly the length of a soccer field.
But arguably its key selling point — the reason HAV resuscitated a mode of aerial transport once thought to have gone down in flames with the Hindenburg — is that it’s green. Even powered by today’s kerosene-based jet fuel, the total emissions per kilometer from its four vectored engines will be 75% less than a conventional narrow-bodied jet covering the same distance. The Airlander of course is much slower. A maximum velocity of under 100mph means that it’s never going to compete directly with jet airliners. “We tend to think of it as sitting between the air and ground markets — a railway carriage for the skies,” Grundy told me.
“When it enters service, perhaps as soon as 2026, the Airlander will offer premium, multi-day cruises to hard-to-reach places like the Arctic Circle.”
A 100-seat cabin designed for regional travel has already attracted orders from carriers in Spain and Scotland. The prototype we were sitting in, with a futuristic carbon-fiber profile and wine glasses dangling above a wraparound bar, is the central section of another configuration called the “expedition payload module.” When it enters service, perhaps as soon as 2026, it will offer premium, multi-day cruises to hard-to-reach places like the Arctic Circle. Behind the communal lounge, a central corridor will lead to eight double ensuite bedrooms. “You’ll even be able to open the windows,” Grundy said.
35 votes -
How China’s EV boom caught Western car companies asleep at the wheel
43 votes -
How best to drive a plug-in hybrid? Seeking advice.
I’ve gone from a 20 year old 4Runner to a 3 year old Pacifica plug-in hybrid and it has changed many of my driving habits. For my job I have a lot of deliveries in the neighborhoods of hilly San...
I’ve gone from a 20 year old 4Runner to a 3 year old Pacifica plug-in hybrid and it has changed many of my driving habits.
For my job I have a lot of deliveries in the neighborhoods of hilly San Francisco and I am curious about strategies I should use to increase the efficiency of battery driving and regenerative braking.
After a month of driving I can’t tell yet if I do better staying on flats or using the energy of the hills. And this thing is so damn heavy! 5000 lbs! (2200kg)
I’m finding that I touch the gas pedal far less and lean on the brake pedal far more, especially after realizing using the brakes won’t necessarily wear them down. But what techniques can I use to make sure I am regenerating instead of using the friction brakes?
Any other general advice about making this switch would also be appreciated. Thanks!
13 votes -
So I suspect my rideshare driver might have been earning extra for viral marketing
So I rarely take rideshare, but sometimes it's important. Today, my driver was friendly, chatty, personable, driving a brand new Ford electric vehicle. He mentioned that he had spent more than a...
So I rarely take rideshare, but sometimes it's important. Today, my driver was friendly, chatty, personable, driving a brand new Ford electric vehicle. He mentioned that he had spent more than a decade selling for an auto dealership before starting to drive. He bragged about the car, the price, the fact that it's built like a tank and safe in a crash. He talked down Tesla and Elon Musk for faults and failings I'm sure most of us can imagine without effort. He had an answer for every anecdote I told about my car experiences that brought the conversation back around to the advantages of this make and model of car, including the fact that cars are significantly cheaper than a couple of years ago.
It wasn't a terrible experience but I feel bemused, puzzled, a little annoyed, a little bit impressed. It's creative if this is in fact a strategy not a coincidence.
Can anyone relate to this experience? What are your thoughts?
28 votes -
The world’s first true female car crash dummy has been developed in Sweden — and it’s a big deal
46 votes -
Your next excuse is on platform five – German train travel has become an experience worthy of Kafka
43 votes -
Australian student invents potentially affordable electric car conversion kit
30 votes -
Workers at Mack Trucks reject contract and join the thousands of UAW picketers already on strike
34 votes -
Countdown to collision: The crash of LATAM Perú flight 2213
10 votes -
Intelligent traffic control with smart speed bumps
7 votes -
Anyone here like motorcycles?
In the spirit of u/gdp's post on escooters, does anyone ride motorcycles or motor scooters (e.g. Vespas)? Compared to cars, motorcycles can be far cheaper in purchase cost, gas, and insurance....
In the spirit of u/gdp's post on escooters, does anyone ride motorcycles or motor scooters (e.g. Vespas)?
Compared to cars, motorcycles can be far cheaper in purchase cost, gas, and insurance. Additionally, lane filtering or riding the shoulder in gridlock can prevent you from being part of the traffic holding everyone up. Going fast is also fun, if that's your thing.
38 votes -
The surprising history of cars in the US offers hope for a shift toward more climate-friendly transportation options
4 votes -
Pricey Toyota Century SUV and its sliding doors are for young folks, Akio Toyoda says
15 votes -
California High-Speed Rail project scores 202 million dollar federal grant. Here’s what it will pay for.
21 votes -
Edison Motors: Meet the British Columbia lumberjacks who set out to build a hybrid electric logging truck
16 votes -
One hundred seconds of confusion: The crash of China Airlines flight 140
17 votes -
How not to fly a plane: The 2017 Teterboro Learjet crash
19 votes -
Hyundai and Kia recall nearly 3.4 million vehicles due to fire risk and urge owners to park outdoors
46 votes -
Former US President Donald Trump says UAW talks do not matter because EV shift will kill jobs
26 votes -
Ford 'pausing' construction of Marshall EV battery plant
20 votes -
The busiest subway in the world?
2 votes -
Those who have longed for a railway connection to Tromsø have been left disappointed once again – Nord-Norgebanen ‘too expensive’
13 votes -
Joe Biden administration announces $1.4 billion to improve US rail safety and boost capacity in thirty-five states
34 votes -
US President Joe Biden urges striking auto workers to “stick with it” in picket line visit unparalleled in history
90 votes -
Dear drivers, steady as you go at 20mph. And welcome to the future.
35 votes -
US cities have a staggering problem of Kia and Hyundai thefts. This data shows it.
32 votes -
Energy efficiency of different land transport means
13 votes -
How fast is necessary for trains?
10 votes -
Norway's Fyllingsdalen tunnel is a showstopping piece of urban cycling infrastructure – for a city where car-centric development still dominates
11 votes -
First private US passenger rail line in 100 years is about to link Miami and Orlando at high speed
38 votes -
I drive the Microlino for the first time. A reimagined electric Isetta.
7 votes