Cars

June 06, 2008

The Citroen 2CV: cleantech from the 1940s

2cv_duo

If you sometimes wonder why more energy efficient technology does not bring about more energy efficient cars, you should take a look at this collection of Citroën brochures (most of them in foreign languages) from the fifties, the sixties, the seventies and the eighties (more here, here, here and  here). These are all original, scanned leaflets of the legendary French hippie car "2CV" or "Deux Chevaux" (known as the "duck" or the "goat" in several European countries). In spite of all the high-tech that has been squeezed into cars since then, the 2CV from 1949 is still more energy efficient than the smallest model of the French car designer today. Why?

Continue reading "The Citroen 2CV: cleantech from the 1940s" »

January 21, 2008

Why the electric car has no (wireless) future

Jamais_contente The electric car is not a technology of the future, but from the past.

The electric car is 170 years old. This may sound surprising, but e-cars predate automobiles with a combustion engine. They were driven out of the market in the beginning of the 20th century because petrol engines had significantly better mileage. One century later, the electric car still faces the same – fundamental – problems. Furthermore, the need for batteries makes them eco-unfriendly by nature. The only possible green future for electric cars is a wired future: hooked up to the overhead lines, like trolleybuses and bumper cars. (Picture: an electric car from 1899)

Continue reading "Why the electric car has no (wireless) future" »

January 09, 2008

Cars on hot air

Aircarengine Following the hype on hydrogen - meet the car on compressed air.

A small car that runs on compressed air is making headlines around the world. The design is a concept from the French engineer Guy Negre, and the Indian car manufacturer Tata Motors is the first to start production of the new vehicle.

If we can believe the news, the zero-emission car has finally arrived. No more pollution, no more CO2. “Amazingly this car is powered by air”, said the BBC in a commentary: “It sounds too good to be true”. In fact, it is too good to be true.

Continue reading "Cars on hot air" »

October 22, 2007

Solar powered cars

Venturi_solar_powered_car

If racing cars can drive on solar energy, then why do normal cars still need fossil fuels?

Around 30 cars race 3,000 kilometres across the Australian continent in the “World Solar Challenge”. Solar cars are electric vehicles that generate their own electricity, by means of around 6 m² of solar panels installed on their bodywork, and a series of linked up batteries that serve as a fuel tank. If we want the car to survive in the longer term, it should become slower and lighter again, trimmed to the efficiency of solar panels and batteries. (Picture: Venturi Astrolab)

Continue reading "Solar powered cars" »

Found

  • Sustainable energy
    We need numbers, not adjectives (read) (via)
  • Autobahn speed limit
    The fastest your car can go while burning 8 liters per 100 km (around 35 miles to the gallon) (read) (via)
  • T-shirts
    If biofuels are so bad, why aren't we campaigning against cotton? (read)
  • Walking
    My shoes get 220 miles per gallon (read)
  • Cities for living
    Paris is a miraculous city in no small measure because modern architects have not been able to get their hands on it (read) (via)
  • Hydroelectricity
    Dam the Mediterranean (see & read)
  • Marconi news
    Retro-tech juxtapositions & encyclopedic image mechanix (see) (via)
  • Home
    Now that's what I call a tree house (see)
  • The good old days
    I'm not interested in retro, I'm interested in better (read)(via)
  • Get an upgrade
    The energy required to produce a computer is enough to run it for 10 years (see & read) (via)
  • Low-tech writing
    Pen reviews (see & read)
  • Where's the fish?
    Ninety years of industrial-scale exploitation of fish has led to ecological meltdown (read)
  • The telectroscope
    Looking through a transatlantic tunnel (read) (visit) (via)
  • Fitness
    The first gym (see & read)
  • Help in case of an atomic bomb attack
    One reason to get down flat is to let the worst of it pass over you (see & read) (Via)
  • Build an electric car
    Retrofitting a 1970s Fiat 500 (read)
  • Minerals
    “Peak oil” is just one of several cases of worldwide peaking and decline of a depletable resource (read)
  • Travelling light
    Airships are one of several green technologies which might be killed by a shortage of materials (read)
  • Farms became factories
    Chemical corporations continue their propaganda efforts to convince farmers that they cannot make a profit without using chemicals, antibiotics, hormones, and genetically manipulated crops and animals (read)
  • Take it easy
    A 0.5 horse power car (see & read)
  • Robot wars
    Airstrikes from unmanned aircraft over Iraq hit record levels in April (read)
  • TV
    A screen that ships without a mouse ships broken (read)
  • Privacy
    How to kill an RFID tag (read)
  • Insurance versus nature
    In the past five years, London councils alone have chopped down almost 40,000 street trees (read)
  • Long-term storage (2)
    How to make a Moleskine notebook (make)
  • Long-term storage
    It only takes five years and archived data is obsolete (read)
  • Monsanto rules (2)
    Genetic modification actually cuts the productivity of crops (read)
  • Monsanto rules (1)
    Intellectual property thuggery is not restricted to the IT and entertainment industries (read)
  • Time is money
    From New York to Los Angeles in 48 hours (read)
  • Solar
    One of oldest forms of energy used by humans -- sunlight concentrated by mirrors -- is poised to make an astonishing comeback (read)
  • Book of the future
    From stone-age tools to space-age computers (see & read)
  • Food crisis
    What level of meat-eating would be sustainable? (read)
  • Green cars (2)
    Cars like the Aptera are severely impeding humanity's faltering steps towards creating a sustainable society (read)
  • Green cars
    From rainforest to rubber plantation (read)
  • Time capsule
    2000 A.D. (see)
  • Time capsule
    2063 A.D. (read)
  • Green buildings (2)
    It takes 90,000 kWh of energy to construct a single family dwelling (read)
  • Green buildings (1)
    Even if 40% of the materials in a new building are recycled, it would take 65 years for a green, energy-efficient new office building to recover the energy lost in demolishing an existing building (read)
  • Flying
    The revival of propeller-driven planes (read)
  • Water
    Low-tech lemonades (make)
  • The front lawn
    What is that chasm between house and street? Why is it there? Or rather, why is nothing there? (read)
  • Ethanol
    The road to hell is paved with good intentions (read)
  • Wheels
    The car of the future (see)
  • Communications
    Build a telegraph (make)
  • Housing
    Build an eco village (make)
  • Wireless
    Mobile phones more dangerous than smoking? (read)
  • Magnetic levitation
    Germany ditches Transrapid project (read)
  • Writing
    Emoticons on paper (see)
  • Trees versus solar
    What happens when one neighbour with solar panels sues another with big, shady trees? (read)
  • Public transport
    A bus to keep pace with other transportation (see)


  • StumbleUpon