Ford’s electric F-150 can be a mobile power source for jobsites and more

https://www.engadget.com/ford-electric-f-150-details-152346439.html

It’s been a few months since we’ve heard much about Ford’s all-electric F-150. Today, along with announcing a $700 million investment in a Michigan-based, high-tech manufacturing plant, Ford shared new details about the EV.

The electric F-150 will allow mobile power generation, so customers can use their trucks as power sources on, say, jobsites or campsites. (What else do you do with a truck?) The vehicle will come with dual electric motors, and Ford claims it will have more horsepower and torque than any F-150 available today. It’ll also have the fastest acceleration and be able to tow heavy trailers. 

The electric F-150 is currently undergoing tens of thousands of hours of “torture testing,” and it’s on track to log millions of simulated, lab and real-world test miles. We’ve already seen it tow over a million pounds.

Ford reiterated the mid-2022 launch target. That puts the electric F-150 behind Tesla’s Cybertruck, which will supposedly arrive in late 2021, and Rivian’s electric R1T pickup and R1S SUV, which have been delayed due to the coronavirus until 2021. Ford isn’t too worried and seems to be banking on the fact that the gas-powered F-150 is the most popular truck in the US. Ford even snubbed Tesla’s invitation to have a public tug-of-war dual, suggesting Ford doesn’t need to prove itself.

via Engadget http://www.engadget.com

September 17, 2020 at 10:33AM

Kippo, the Dating App Made for Gamers, Released for Android

https://www.droid-life.com/2020/09/17/kippo-the-dating-app-made-for-gamers-released-for-android/

Read the original post: Kippo, the Dating App Made for Gamers, Released for Android

There’s a new dating app on the scene for Android users, one made specifically with gamers in mind. Called Kippo, it appears to be a pretty popular app over on iOS, so it’s good to see Android folk allowed to get in on the action.

Kippo is all about the gaming, so don’t see it solely as a dating app. You can search for platonic people to game with, too, which means your current significant other won’t kill you if they find it installed on your phone. To build a profile, you’ll add some photos, choose your favorite games, then start searching for likeminded people.

The app is entirely free to use, but note there’s the ability to subscribe to a premium membership which allows you to browse users as much as you’d like.

Enjoy yourself and make some friends.

Google Play Link

via Droid Life: A Droid Community Blog https://ift.tt/2dLq79c

September 17, 2020 at 05:23PM

British students invent a device that captures tire dust

https://www.autoblog.com/2020/09/17/tire-dust-capture-invention/


LONDON — A group of students in Britain has invented a way of capturing tire dust — a major contributor to air and water pollution — as a car drives along, winning them this year’s James Dyson Award in the UK.

Tiny particles of rubber from tires are responsible for nearly half of road transport particulate emissions, according to the UK government, and they are the second largest source of microplastic pollutant in oceans after single-use plastic.

“Everyone focuses on air pollution being directly from the engines themselves and coming out of the exhaust pipe,” Hugo Richardson, one of four members of The Tire Collective, told Reuters in London.

“But what people don’t necessarily recognize is that tire wear is a huge contributor to that, and that’s partly down to its microscopic size and the fact that you don’t obviously see it all the time.”

The award-winning solution was to capture tire particles at their source by fitting a device that wraps closely around the edge of the tire and using electrostatics and the aerodynamics of a spinning wheel to collect particles as they are emitted.

Richardson said the coronavirus lockdown, which reduced traffic significantly, had given people a glimpse of how clean a city’s air could be.

“I think we all realize that clean air in our cities is not a pipe dream any more, but something that is immediately achievable with some clever innovation and some impetus from those in charge.”

The students say their prototype can collect 60% of all airborne particles from tires under a controlled environment on their test rig.

The benefits to public health could be profound.

“These (tire) particles are actually small enough to be inhaled,” said Siobhan Anderson, a member of the Innovation Design Engineering program offered jointly by Imperial College London and the Royal College of Art.

“So they can cause different lung diseases and developmental issues and they also enter our water and eventually make their way through our food chain and come back to us.”

Each time a vehicle brakes, accelerates or turns a corner, the tires wear and tiny particles become airborne, producing half a million tons of tire particles annually in Europe alone, according to the International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health.

As the shift towards electric vehicles accelerates, exhaust emissions will fall, but tire particles will continue to pollute the air and the wider environment.

The team believes tire emissions may actually increase, as electric vehicles become heavier due to added battery weight.

The Tire Collective will now progress to the international stage of the James Dyson Award, to be announced on Nov. 19.

In the meantime, the team is working on securing a patent for their design and continuing the project as a startup.

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via Autoblog https://ift.tt/1afPJWx

September 17, 2020 at 08:41AM