Racescort666
Racescort666
Racescort666

I think I understand. You have an aqueous ionized solution that the "battery" converts to some other aqueous solution to create electricity? Interesting.

Ha, exactly what I was thinking. It may run on "salt water" but if that salt water has to be processed in a way that makes it a zero sum improvement, it's not really helping.

I'm curious about what kind of "salt water" this is. I assume there's some sort of purity and electrolyte content that's necessary. It can't be as easy as walking down to the ocean with a bucket and fillin' 'er up is it?

There's been a big push recently for fleet vehicles to use alternative fuels (electric included) because they typically have fixed (read predictable) route and a home base. This offsets the fact that there isn't as much infrastructure to support alternative fuels. The lack of support infrastructure and range have

"Imagine never losing someone to a traffic accident ever again," says a Google engineer in voiceover.

There is also electro discharge machining that can be used to cut very hard materials.

^^^ This. Bikes have awful aero, exposed wheels, tall, they have so many things going against them.

Professional > amateur

Buzzfeederated: "This one weird trick that the oil companies don't want you to know about!" Thanks for dispelling this bullshit Torch.

What are the odds of seeing a Robinson R22 on this segment?

This makes me wonder if they are going to keep a lock down on stealth tech even though it's making it's way into the commercial market. As far as I know, radar absorbent material is still extremely tightly controlled technology.

I kind of actually admire the gall of whoever green-lit something that could make a seasoned auto journalist this uncomfortable. Sorry Jason, I'm sadistic and take pleasure in your pain but good on them for at least being different. Even if it's as weird and awkward as you say. (It probably is, I was in theater at one

I thought my Tamagotchi was awesome until I got into high school. Then I realized that I, like my tamagotchi, was not cool.

No one who has owned any car ever has used it for it's intended purpose. ;)

Sideways.

They never really described how you die when you're exposed to the vacuum of space. The short version is that you dehydrate and asphyxiate. There is so little oxygen in space that the mechanism that brings oxygen to your cells in your blood reverses and takes oxygen away. Also, the pressure is so low that water boils

So much awesome, so few 68 Dodge Chargers left in the world.

There is nothing you can put on the Internet that can't be removed. Or maybe I have that wrong...