Category Archives: Cool Things

Cool Thing – Charge Your Phone By Walking, Running

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Charging your mobile phone battery may soon be little more than a walk in the park.

 

The Auckland Bioengineering Institute’s Biomimetics lab has built electric generators that can harness the energy of movements such as running and walking, which they hope will soon be able to power personal devices.

 

“When you walk, you flex your legs and strike your heel on the ground, and you swing your arms. The rubbery heel is used to buffer the impact with the ground. Imagine if you could take that buffering, that energy-absorbing bit, and use that in a positive way,” said associate professor Iain Anderson, head of the Biomimetics lab.

 

A normal shoe dissipates energy as heat when it hits the ground. This technology uses thin stretchable generators to turn mechanical energy into electrical energy.

 

The idea, originally from US research institute SRI International, has been developed by the Kiwis into smaller, lightweight generators to allow for more comfortable, practical energy generation.

 

“Before we started doing what we are doing you had to have quite a big high voltage power supply and complicated switches. We have eliminated that big bulky stuff so you can put it into a shoe,” said Dr Thomas McKay, who worked alongside Anderson in the Biomimetics lab.

They hope to be able to convert the technology to real, practical uses within the year, using the energy of movement to charge smartphones, iPods and heart rate monitors for athletes.

 

“We are moving into a world where we have all these extra capabilities and wearable systems – we’ll need some way of powering these wearable systems,” said Anderson.

Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/digital-life/mobiles/charge-your-smartphone-by-walking-running-20131001-2upis.html#ixzz2gTgG9UeZ

Hurricane-Resistant House

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Weather forecasters expect 2013 to be an above average hurricane season, with up to 20 named storms predicted for the five-month season that began June 1. Up to 11 of those are projected to strengthen into hurricanes, six of them Category 3 or higher. An average season sees 12 tropical storms and six hurricanes. In 2012 there were 19 named storms, including Sandy, the second-costliest hurricane in U.S. history.

 

Shape: Its circular shape is aerodynamic, allowing winds to flow around the house and dramatically reducing the air pressure on the exterior walls. The low-pitched roof system is angled for optimum wind deflection and minimum drag, diminishing the risk of damage or collapse.

 

Engineering: The home’s exacting design incorporates engineering redundancies that work with nature not against it. Roof and floor trusses radiate from the center of the house, helping spread the force of high winds throughout the structure instead of allowing it to build up in one area. A building envelope, with air-tight construction at the key force intrusion areas of the roof, windows and doors, helps the structure remain intact.

 

Connections: In its design and engineering, Deltec focuses on three key potential points of failure due to high winds – roof to walls, walls to floor, and floor to foundation. To ensure connections are as tight as possible in those critical areas, the homes use truss hangers and connectors that are many times stronger than those required by building codes in hurricane-prone areas.

 

Material excellence: Deltec homes are framed with lumber that is more than twice as strong as traditional framing lumber. Structural sheathing used for roof, walls and floors meet the hurricane impact test of Miami-Dade County, which has the strictest hurricane building codes in the country. And nailing patterns in Deltec homes are denser than other houses.

 

Sustainability: Deltec designs can be adapted easily to incorporate efficiencies like passive heating and cooling, solar hot water and high-performance insulation — attributes that not only contribute to overall energy cost savings, but that will sustain the home and its occupants in the aftermath of a storm when local utilities and infrastructure may be crippled.

Read more: http://www.motherearthnews.com/green-homes/deltec-homes.aspx#ixzz2ZJpwBiI6

Cheap leases offered to spur electric car sales

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DETROIT—Auto companies are hoping lower lease prices can put a charge into sluggish sales of electric cars.Honda announced Thursday that it’s slashing the monthly lease cost of its tiny Fit EV by one third, following similar moves by other automakers. Honda also is throwing in other goodies, such as a free home charging station and unlimited mileage.

Electric vehicles once were billed as the answer to high gas prices and dependence on foreign oil. But U.S. oil production is rising, gas supplies are abundant and pump prices have remained relatively stable the past three years, making consumers reluctant to switch from internal combustion engines. There’s also the worry that an electric car could run out of juice on longer trips.

As a result, electric car sales, while growing, are only a tiny fraction of overall U.S. auto sales. Automakers sold just over 12,000 pure-electric vehicles in the U.S. through April, according to Ward’s AutoInfoBank and Tesla Motors. That’s less than 1 percent of the 4.97 million cars and trucks sold during the same period.

Still, automakers have rolled out new electric models, increasing the competitive pressure.

Automakers generally lose money on electric cars because the technology is so new and the batteries are costly. But they have been subsidizing sales by lowering prices. Chrysler CEO Sergio Marchionne said earlier this year that his company will lose $10,000 on every Fiat 500 electric vehicle it sells. Others have reported similar losses.

With the Fit EV, Honda is offering a $259 per month lease, down $130 from the initial $389 per month offer when the car went on sale in July of last year. The reduced lease price starts June 1 and will apply to existing EV leases, Honda said.

The three-year lease requires no money down and comes with unlimited mileage, free routine maintenance, collision insurance coverage and a free 240-volt home charging station, the company said Thursday. The charging station normally costs $995. The car buyer must take care of installation.

Read more: Cheap leases offered to spur electric car sales – The Denver Post http://www.denverpost.com/businessbreakingnews/ci_23353418/cheap-leases-offered-spur-electric-car-sales#ixzz2UnfbGRic

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