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#11
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Ok, I was engaging in a bit of hyperbole there. But even if these methods
could produce arbitrarily long nanotubes at 1/10th the maximum measured nanotube strength, this would be a major change in materials science. Bob Clark ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Finally, nanotechnology can now fulfill its potential to revolutionize 21st-century technology, from the space elevator, to private, orbital launchers, to 'flying cars'. This crowdfunding campaign is to prove it: Nanotech: from air to space. https://www.indiegogo.com/projects/n...ce/x/13319568/ ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- wrote in message ... In sci.physics Robert Clark wrote: American Journal of Nanomaterials Vol. 4, No. 2, 2016, pp 39-43. doi: 10.12691/ajn-4-2-2 | Research Article From Nanoscale to Macroscale: Applications of Nanotechnology to Production of Bulk Ultra-Strong Materials. Robert Clark Department of Mathematics, Widener University, Chester, United States http://pubs.sciepub.com/ajn/4/2/2/index.html Next stop: the space elevator. Nope, the next stop would be ANYTHING practical. Bob Clark ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Finally, nanotechnology can now fulfill its potential to revolutionize 21st-century technology, from the space elevator, to private, orbital launchers, to 'flying cars'. The lack of flying cars has never been a materials problem. There have been lots of flying cars built. -- Jim Pennino --- This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software. https://www.avast.com/antivirus |
#13
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"Robert Clark" wrote:
Thanks for taking the time to read it. Right, these now are just proposals. All of them though would be easy and low cost to test for nanotechnology research labs. Everything is always "easy and low cost" until someone has to actually build something and make it work. -- "Some people get lost in thought because it's such unfamiliar territory." --G. Behn |
#14
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In sci.physics Robert Clark wrote:
Ok, I was engaging in a bit of hyperbole there. But even if these methods could produce arbitrarily long nanotubes at 1/10th the maximum measured nanotube strength, this would be a major change in materials science. Bob Clark Only in a few niche applications where weight and strength are competing parameters. For the vast majority of things there is no incentive to build them from nanotubes. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Finally, nanotechnology can now fulfill its potential to revolutionize 21st-century technology, from the space elevator, to private, orbital launchers, to 'flying cars'. This crowdfunding campaign is to prove it: Nanotech: from air to space. https://www.indiegogo.com/projects/n...ce/x/13319568/ ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- wrote in message ... In sci.physics Robert Clark wrote: American Journal of Nanomaterials Vol. 4, No. 2, 2016, pp 39-43. doi: 10.12691/ajn-4-2-2 | Research Article From Nanoscale to Macroscale: Applications of Nanotechnology to Production of Bulk Ultra-Strong Materials. Robert Clark Department of Mathematics, Widener University, Chester, United States http://pubs.sciepub.com/ajn/4/2/2/index.html Next stop: the space elevator. Nope, the next stop would be ANYTHING practical. Bob Clark ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Finally, nanotechnology can now fulfill its potential to revolutionize 21st-century technology, from the space elevator, to private, orbital launchers, to 'flying cars'. The lack of flying cars has never been a materials problem. There have been lots of flying cars built. -- Jim Pennino |
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#16
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In sci.physics Doc O'Leary wrote:
For your reference, records indicate that wrote: The sole reason that flying cars have never been a commercial success is economics No, its simply because theyre a stupid outdated SF concept birthed from a car-crazed society. Once you have a vehicle that can fly between locations, it makes zero sense to also make it suitable for driving on roads. Who in their right mind is going to *drive* anywhere they could just fly to? Who is going trust that a roadworthy vehicle after miles of driving is going to remain airworthy? In the real world you would never be allowed to land and take off just anywhere for a whole lot of reasons, so you would still need to drive some distance. Designated areas, if such were to ever become common, would likely be at least 10 to 20 miles apart. In the real world, driving a flying car has never made it not airworthy. -- Jim Pennino |
#17
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Doc O'Leary wrote:
For your reference, records indicate that wrote: The sole reason that flying cars have never been a commercial success is economics No, its simply because theyre a stupid outdated SF concept birthed from a car-crazed society. Once you have a vehicle that can fly between locations, it makes zero sense to also make it suitable for driving on roads. Who in their right mind is going to *drive* anywhere they could just fly to? Who is going trust that a roadworthy vehicle after miles of driving is going to remain airworthy? Eliminate the economics problems and flying cars still make no sense. Imagine a world where everyone is Superman. Superman does not drive to the rescue. Only motorheads ever thought flying cars were a good idea. No, Jimp. Flying cars were and are a good idea unless you think you can just land anywhere you like. If you fly a GA aircraft, what do you do once you land it? -- "Some people get lost in thought because it's such unfamiliar territory." --G. Behn |
#18
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In sci.physics Fred J. McCall wrote:
Doc O'Leary wrote: For your reference, records indicate that wrote: The sole reason that flying cars have never been a commercial success is economics No, it?s simply because they?re a stupid outdated SF concept birthed from a car-crazed society. Once you have a vehicle that can fly between locations, it makes zero sense to also make it suitable for driving on roads. Who in their right mind is going to *drive* anywhere they could just fly to? Who is going trust that a roadworthy vehicle after miles of driving is going to remain airworthy? Eliminate the ?economics? problems and flying cars still make no sense. Imagine a world where everyone is Superman. Superman does not drive to the rescue. Only motorheads ever thought flying cars were a good idea. No, Jimp. Flying cars were and are a good idea unless you think you can just land anywhere you like. If you fly a GA aircraft, what do you do once you land it? You are replying to someone else, not me. Once you land the plane, you taxi to the tie down area, tie down and secure the aircraft, then go see the FBO. There will quite often be a dedicated phone to Enterprise. Don't forget to ask for your Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association discount. In the post 9/11 world there is yet another complicaton; all airports have fences around the operating areas, which means if you are not based at the airport and have the ability to open and close the gate, you will have to find someone who does to let you on and off the airport with a flying car. -- Jim Pennino |
#19
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Fred J. McCall wrote:
Doc O'Leary wrote: For your reference, records indicate that wrote: The sole reason that flying cars have never been a commercial success is economics No, its simply because theyre a stupid outdated SF concept birthed from a car-crazed society. Once you have a vehicle that can fly between locations, it makes zero sense to also make it suitable for driving on roads. Who in their right mind is going to *drive* anywhere they could just fly to? Who is going trust that a roadworthy vehicle after miles of driving is going to remain airworthy? Eliminate the economics problems and flying cars still make no sense. Imagine a world where everyone is Superman. Superman does not drive to the rescue. Only motorheads ever thought flying cars were a good idea. No, Jimp. Flying cars were and are a good idea unless you think you can just land anywhere you like. If you fly a GA aircraft, what do you do once you land it? My apologies. Got the wrong poster associated with the comments. The comments, however, still apply. -- "Insisting on perfect safety is for people who don't have the balls to live in the real world." -- Mary Shafer, NASA Dryden |
#20
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For your reference, records indicate that
Fred J. McCall wrote: Flying cars were and are a good idea unless you think you can just land anywhere you like. Just the opposite! If I can only fly between airports, why not just call it an airplane? What actual problem does a “flying car” otherwise solve that make it such a fantastic machine to have? What is the actual use case that demonstrates *any* added value? If you fly a GA aircraft, what do you do once you land it? Depends on the problem you’re looking to solve. If it is to keep a vehicle in constant service, I’d say you’d fly it right back out to its next destination. Same way it doesn’t make much sense to leave a self-driving car sitting in a parking lot doing nothing. -- "Also . . . I can kill you with my brain." River Tam, Trash, Firefly |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Paper published on producing arbitrarily long nanotubes. | Robert Clark[_5_] | Policy | 79 | September 25th 16 04:16 AM |
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