sâmbătă, 16 mai 2015

Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis

Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis


Cars of the Future, Today: a Flying Car and a Self-Balancing Two-Wheeled Car

Posted: 16 May 2015 09:59 AM PDT

The pace of technological advancement accelerates every year. Here are two car prototypes that highlight the advancement.

C-1 Electric Two-Wheeled Car

Please consider the C1, a Self-Balancing, Two-Wheeled Car invented by Daniel Kim, founder of Lit Motors.


Motorcycles make more sense for single-passenger trips, but they are more dangerous to operate than cars, expose riders to the elements, and require skill to keep upright. Kim, a 35-year-old who wears jeans and a black t-shirt, leads the way to the company's prototype solution: the all-electric C-1. It has two wheels, like a motorcycle, but a steel and composite outer body, like a car. He invites a visitor to sit inside the C-1 and sway from side to side. The vehicle, emitting a steady hum, stays upright. No kickstand props it up; no third wheel adds stability. "When was the last time you balanced on a motorcycle at zero miles an hour?" Kim rhetorically asks. "Never."

A patented control system, featuring two gyros that spin in a compartment beneath the driver's seat, is the secret to the C-1's balancing act. The gyros provide the torque to keep the vehicle upright no matter what the driver does and to hold it at the precisely correct lean angle when the vehicle turns.

The allure of a two-wheeled, self-stabilizing car has tempted automotive designers for at least a century, but earlier prototypes had fatal flaws—the gyros were too large, the mechanical control systems too crude. The C-1 instead employs the foot-wide, high-speed, computerized technology of devices known as control-moment gyros (CMGs), which are mostly used for positioning satellites in space. Frederick Leve, an aerospace engineer with the U.S. Air Force who specializes in CMGs, says that if Lit can effectively and affordably deploy CMGs on a terrestrial vehicle, "that is a breakthrough. That's dramatic."

Kim hopes the product will hit the market within two years, but admits that the path to creating a vehicle that "can defy gravity" isn't simple. "There is no real track for learning how to start your own car company," Kim says, "so I had to make it myself."
C-1 Schematic



AeroMobil

Next consider the car I want, the AeroMobile. It's a car that flies.



AeroMobile Video



Link if video does not play: AeroMobile.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com

Seth's Blog : How to go faster

How to go faster

How do you get to market faster the competition? How do you become more efficient without violating the laws of physics? How do you save time, money and frustration?

It all comes down to decision hygiene:

1. Make decisions faster. You rarely need more time. Mostly, you must merely choose to decide. The simple test: is more time needed to gather useful data, or is more time merely a way to postpone the decision?

2. Make decisions in the right order. Do the decisions with the most expensive and time-consuming dependencies first. Don't ask the boss to approve the photos once you're in galleys, and don't start driving until you've looked at the map.

3. Only make decisions once, unless new data gives you a profitable reason to change your mind.

4. Don't ask everyone to help you decide. Ask the people who will either improve the decision or who have input that will make it more likely you won't get vetoed later.

5. Triage decisions. Some decisions don't matter. Some decisions are so unimportant that they are trumped by speed. And a few decisions are worth focusing on.

You don't need a consultant or a lot of money to radically improve your speed to market. You will speed up once you're comfortable going faster.

       

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