Cars To Be Assembled Atom By Atom 285
Roland Piquepaille writes "In a new article, the Detroit News says that the adoption of nanotechnology by car manufacturers will produce safer, lighter and cheaper vehicles. While GM is already using nanocomposite materials for several vans, Ford is developing new nanoengineered catalysts to replace platinum. The newspaper gives other examples, such as auto-adaptive suspension systems, scratch-resistant paints or nanocoated windshields which will not crack. In fact, all parts in a car can be improved by using nanotechnology, according to the article. And if automakers are only going to introduce limited amounts of nanotechnology-related products in the next few years, their usage should be widespread within ten years. More details are available in this overview."
asdf (Score:2, Funny)
"DRIVE, DRIVE!!"
Please state your destination
"ANYWHERE, JUST GOOOO!!!"
Please state a specific address
"SHEET, SHEEEEETTT!!!!"
I'm sorry, that is not a valid address
"RAAHHHHHHHHH"
(Rips the Johnny Cab out of its seat)
Re:asdf (Score:4, Insightful)
Errm.... (Score:5, Insightful)
Have a Bigger P3Ni5 Using Nonatechnology! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Have a Bigger P3Ni5 Using Nonatechnology! (Score:5, Funny)
It kind of disturbs me that I at first read this as having something to do with a weird nickel and phosphorus compound...
Re:Have a Bigger P3Ni5 Using Nonatechnology! (Score:5, Funny)
Definitely would be a hard one...
And hot... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Errm.... (Score:3, Interesting)
Of course we learned that when trying to create biocompatible compounds using chemical means, but remember that they are creating materials and not cars and couldn't care less about your well-being.
Re:Errm.... (Score:5, Insightful)
We already have plenty of "byproducts small enough to get into your cells and subtly kill you". Smoke, alcohol, really any poisonous compound - these are all made of up things called "molecules" that can potentially get into your cells and cause damage. Sadly, your tinfoil hat may not protect you from all of these "molecules".
(Before you mod me Flamebait: as long as there has been life, there has always been pathogenic matter that exerts its effects on a subcellular level. What's unique about this situation?)
Re:Errm.... (Score:2)
Re:Errm.... (Score:2, Offtopic)
Except things like smoke and alcohol are organic and more "natural".
Mercury and HF acid are natural. Don't get any on you.
Sounds Great! (Score:2)
Re:Errm.... (Score:2)
Yeah, sure, safer, lighter, cheaper.
But the real questions all are about style. To wit, can I get one of these cars in a "gray goo" color?
OpenSource Nanotech? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:OpenSource Nanotech? (Score:5, Funny)
You see, if you grow your own car, you'd be infringing on the car company's copyright. (The car companies have have a non-expiring copyright on all Cars®, you see.)
Furthermore, growing your own car will be a felony punishable by a $1,000,000 fine and 30 years in Federal Pound-Me-In-the-Ass prison under the DMCLFMBBC (Digital Millenium Copyrights Last For a Millenium to Benefit Big Companies) Act of 2007.
Oh, and you might as well not even bother to try and download a car since your computer will just blow up [slashdot.org] anyways.
DUH (Score:2, Funny)
It will suffer the same fate befalling Software (Score:5, Insightful)
At the point where the ruling oligarchs choose to relinquish their architectures of control (patent and copyright law) and allow knowledge and thought to be shared freely.
I.e. not in the lifetime of anyone currently living, if ever.
Expect nano-designs to be covered by both patents and copyrights, much like software in America is today. And expect progress to be decimated as a result, and the best products to be created in technical violation of the law in many places, such as mplayer is today (though fortunately not in violation of the laws where its author lives).
And the latter, semi-optomistic note, assumes there are safe havens where free thinking people can still create
Too Good to be True (Score:5, Insightful)
I think this is "reporter getting carried away by 'nano' buzzword". Nano is NOT the holy grail. Maybe some parts will have nano coatings, but those aren't even assembled "atom-by-atom".
Re:Too Good to be True (Score:5, Interesting)
One of the other added benefits from using nano-technology in this field is that certain devices could be used as a warning system, or sensor. In that sense, implanting these tools in the framework of the vehicle can be considered going "atom by atom" to choose the most likely places an impact will occur, and using the nano-machines as information relay to the vehicle's on-board computer. This way, instead of relying on crush sensitive technologies to deploy air bags and the like, we can use more precise measuring devices to help improve safety in vehicles.
Of course, the one trade-off of this is that as these technologies allow for more driver error, there is the potential we could lean too hard on these devices to protect human life. It's a very dangerous idea to have a vehicle that is so protective of its passengers that the passengers become careless... but I think we're a long way off from that.
Re:Too Good to be True (Score:2)
I think we're already there. The majority of accidents I've seen or heard about lately involve a soccer mom or someone else in their SUV that felt so safe in th
Re:Too Good to be True (Score:5, Insightful)
Those soccer moms aren't more careless because they drive SUVs. They've always been careless drivers. The problem is that those large, heavy, tall vehicles, while arguably safer when in an accident, are less forgiving when trying to avoid an accident.
Re:Too Good to be True (Score:2)
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/r
Re:Too Good to be True (Score:2, Funny)
SUV's work to hinder Darwin's theory.
After all, evolution doesn't work right if the incompetent are prevented from dying due to their incompetence.
Re:Too Good to be True (Score:2)
The problem is that those large, heavy, tall vehicles, while arguably safer when in an accident...,/i>
Don't even try to pull this one. Huge bulky cars are only safer for those that *drive* them ( and even that's debatable). God forbid you are the person in the sub-compact getting run over by those god awful things and their idiot drivers.
Re:Too Good to be True (Score:2)
Pull WHAT? I never said they were safer for those being hit. I was speaking about the mindset of SUV drivers. Do you really think they're thinking of the safety of anyone except themselves and their precious children?
Re:Too Good to be True (Score:2)
Re:Too Good to be True (Score:2)
Personal injury is only one reason why people don't drive carelessly. Also very high up on the list are "not wanting to wreck their car", "not wanting to incur liability for damaging others' property", and "n
Re:Too Good to be True (Score:2)
By the time we get to the point where we can build AN ENTIRE CAR atom by atom, I want to be flying around Earth in spaceships at 10000mph.
Umm, that's a hell of a speeding ticket yer looking forward to.
Could you help me? (Score:5, Insightful)
Thanks!
-Rylfaeth
Re:Could you help me? (Score:5, Funny)
That would be nifty (Score:3, Funny)
The dinosaurs wouldn't have to be functional, they would just have to decay properly, so all of the early versions could be put to good use even if the cloning part went slightly askew*. Yay - genetic experimentation without all of the nasty public relations fallout!
* Unless they're tasty - this is prime cookout season, you know.
Re:Could you help me? (Score:2)
Re:Could you help me? (Score:3, Funny)
sub-microscopic assembly lines (Score:3, Insightful)
ahh, scrub it. People will still find a way to drive like idiots, even in super nanotechnologically advanced cars.
Calls for some attitude adjustment... (Score:2, Insightful)
Safety has become a valuable sales argument for car manufacturers lately. Both passive safety and active safety have evolved quite a lot during the last few years.
Both will for sure keep on evolving in the future, but the only thing that has not and will not evolve are people. To be more exact, the attitudes have not evolved.
Everytime when an accident occurs you see the headlines screaming right at you in the news, and even the most hardened road hogs seem to calm down for a week or t
Re:sub-microscopic assembly lines (Score:2)
You could have saved some bandwidth by shortening your post to shit happens.
This is surface chemistry, not nanotechnology (Score:5, Interesting)
Good technology, just too much hype.
What's the difference? (Score:5, Insightful)
The problem is that to in most science fiction and speculative non-fiction, "nanotechnology" has been used primarily as a synonym for "nanorobotics", which would be infinitely cooler but is much further away.
Re:What's the difference? (Score:2, Insightful)
We've been fooling with this stuff for quite literally ages, it's just that we've now found the light switch... It's alot easier to work in the light.
You have got to be high... (Score:5, Insightful)
Manufacturers are too cheap to do things like hot dip galvanizing body and frame, but they will use a bunch of nanotech? Ironic. Something as simple and low-tech as galvinizing cars that would double or triple their lifetime are left out as too expensive...
Let's start with the simple stuff please.
Re:You have got to be high... (Score:3, Funny)
I'm going to trim and rephrase a bit..
Re:You have got to be high... (Score:2)
Re:You have got to be high... (Score:2)
Maybe, but people don't have any reasonable way to evaluate the life time of a car.
If the only observable difference between two cars is the sticker price, most people buy the cheaper on
galvanized iron (Score:2, Informative)
Re:You have got to be high... (Score:2)
The other factor is buzzwords: people are going to be much more impressed by "built with the latest nanotechnology!" than by "galvanized body!"
Re:You have got to be high... (Score:2)
Besides, how often does a modern car rust apart anymore before it simply becomes more expensive to keep running than replace?
Re:You have got to be high... (Score:2)
Most cars I have owned have been killed by rust (Two Fords, a Subaru and a Benz). Here in Ohio, we salt the bejesus out of our roads to keep them ice free. You see a lot of 80s GM cars driving around still though, since they were full body hot dip galvanized.
What I am saying is, there is a lot of fancy stuff on the concept cars, and even on luxury cars, but this wil
I bet I know where they got the idea (Score:5, Funny)
Re:I bet I know where they got the idea (Score:2)
What's a legos anyway?
Re:I bet I know where they got the idea (Score:2)
I know what Lego is; I still have lots of Lego at my parents' house. The question I asked was, what is/are 'Legos'?
More perks? (Score:5, Interesting)
What wonderful news! So in a few years, when modern industrial society has seized up and American life as we've known it comes to halt as a result of the rapidly diminishing fossil fuel supply, our cars will still be shiny!
I apologize for being off topic--mod me down--but the American car/suv/prettiness craze has gotten way out of hand...
More seriously, I urge people to plug into the facts and realties of the worlds fossil fuels, and how the American way of life and economy is presently overly-dependent on this resource.
We can only hope to elect policymakers that have the courage to make the right decisions and foster international cooperation (rather than, say, invade and occupy oil-producing regions).
/rant
Re:More perks? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:More perks? (Score:3, Interesting)
you know.... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:More perks? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:More perks? (Score:2)
Here's a great short factual piece [worldenergysource.com] that's chuck-full of info, references, and key quotes (such as the Exxon vice-president quote).
Atom by atom? (Score:5, Funny)
Yet meeting California emmissions will bk them (Score:5, Insightful)
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Yet meeting California emmissions will bk them (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Yet meeting California emmissions will bk them (Score:5, Insightful)
It's the "if they can put a man on the moon..." fallacy. It assumes that the problem they solved is as hard or harder than the one they didn't solve. Development of a nano-coated windshield does not logically suggest that they could've reduced emissions by 30% by applying their resources there instead.
Re:Yet meeting California emmissions will bk them (Score:2)
So you claim, but present no evidence.
Re:WTF are you talking about? (Score:4, Insightful)
??? Last time I checked, exhaust came out of cars in Boston too.
Last time I checked, you could hop in the T in Boston instead of driving.
Nanotechnology windshields....not a good thing (Score:4, Interesting)
If Im dead...my beautiful windshield doesnt mean a damn thing.
Re:Nanotechnology windshields....not a good thing (Score:2, Insightful)
This outlier was disregarded decades ago (Score:4, Informative)
The chance of my car being submerged in water is maybe ten million times less likely than the chance a collision will press my face against the windsheild or door glass at a high rate of speed, in which case I definitely do not want to be able to shatter that glass on impact - if I do, if forms a guillotene that take off a body part when I retract.
Re:This outlier was disregarded decades ago (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:This outlier was disregarded decades ago (Score:2)
Safety glass is designed to break safely (Score:4, Interesting)
If you make it out of nano, its also going to be an issue for paramedics to try and get into the car.
A seatbelt has a button to release it. There should be some safety measure built into nanowindshields that will allow them to be broken or removed in case of an emergency.
Re:Nanotechnology windshields....not a good thing (Score:2)
If Im dead...my beautiful windshield doesnt mean a damn thing.
If this is a regular occurance perhaps you shouldn't drive. if it is not. Then worry more about the probable chance of chipping your winshield vs the improbable chance that you roll your dumb ass self into a canal.
wake me up ... (Score:4, Funny)
when the nano-vats can be powered by a few kilo's worth of any fresh bio-mass consisting of mostly water.
Scope of problem (Score:4, Funny)
* Amenities like cup holders that can absorb or produce heat, keeping beverages at the perfect temperature.
I didn't realize that was such a big problem.
"Any part of the car that's made has the potential to be improved by nanotechnology," Messner said, "because ultimately materials and parts are made out of atoms and molecules."
Oh, right.
Unfortunately (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Unfortunately (Score:2)
I feel another class action suit against McDonald's brewing.
Programmable use-by date? (Score:4, Insightful)
Even if they could make anything for even equivilent cost, let alone cheaper, they'd probably still find some way of letting it break in 3-5 years.
Lacks imagination (Score:5, Interesting)
There is a model out there, one that has been out for 10 years now: the Hypercar. It started as a concept by the Rocky Mountain Institute [rmi.org], and eventually a company by the same name (Hypercar Inc. [hypercar.com]) was formed. Slashdotters might find it interesting that Bill Joy is one of their investors.
It's amazing technology, and it would have far reaching implications.
Re:Lacks imagination (Score:2)
So where's an actual Hypercar? They promised a prototype would be out a couple years ago. I refuse to believe anything from a company whose website says they leverage "synergies" unless I see a working prototype. I can't even find a photo of a mockup. The best I can find is a few CAD views.
Re:Lacks imagination (Score:2, Insightful)
Safer? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Safer? (Score:3, Interesting)
It will be safter because the car will have alot less mass and would bounce off rather than bulldoze through other vechiles. It would also be super strong so the passenger compartment could not be crushed. It wouldn't rust, bend, it can be transparent...
Its the
Cheap nanotech (Score:3, Insightful)
Anyone here check out a Cadillac lately? Doesn't it just reek of Chevy? Cheap plastics, ringy body panels with the wrong kind of or inadequate insulation, buttons, knobs and levers that are not only in the wrong or confusing places but feel like they're going to fall off.
I think someone needs to learn how to make a car before they make a super-nanotech-alien-killing-machine car.
I mean, foot handbrakes? What is this, 1970? I can't use that emergency brake in an emergency because my feet are busy DRIVING!!! It's a parking-only brake. At least they finally found a manual transmission.
You'd think Chrysler would learn something from Daimler. Nope. Check out the trunk on the Crossfire. You practically have to unload groceries from bags before you can get them in the car! How is nanotech going to help that? "Hey, it's 30% stronger!" "Yeah, but I still can't put a suitcase in it!"
Maybe they'll finally come up with paint that doesn't fade and peel quickly, and if good interior materials are cheap maybe they'll start using them. Won't tell them where to put things, however.
Doesn't solve reason #1 why I've basically given up on American cars - the manual transmission. Generally Not Offered. Nanotech won't help that, probably make slushboxes smaller, though. Wait, Volvo already did that. And didn't send us the manual S80. GRRRRRRR.
Walk before you run, people. Walk before you run.
Uh... (Score:2)
As for manual transmissions, well, each to his own, I guess. I got sick of stick shifts years ago when I left my teens and stopped being a wannabe race car driver. I'm looking at new car
Re:Uh... (Score:2)
. Express dislike for the current President, fine (I don't like him either), but enough with the hypocritical jingoism already.
Umm, all the jingoism I've seen has come from this side of the pond.
Re:Cheap nanotech (Score:2)
Neither strikes me as particular safe.
shouldn't they apply this to aviation first...? (Score:4, Insightful)
If nanotechnology allows us to check material integrity in both in the assembly line and in the periodic revisions as someone here has stated what are we waiting for?
Re:shouldn't they apply this to aviation first...? (Score:2)
what's it good for... (Score:4, Interesting)
for those who haven't heard it yet:
tabloid style [lifeaftertheoilcrash.net]
overview [hubbertpeak.com]
Re:what's it good for... (Score:2, Funny)
What if we get drafted? What if oil runs out? What if the stock market crashes? WHAT IF WE'RE INVADED BY GREEN PLUTONIANS?!?!
Please. Buy my book to find out the answers to these and other perfectly reasonable questions. And remember, The World Is Coming to an End.
Re:what's it good for... (Score:2)
Interesting (Score:2, Interesting)
Either way, there's a lot of good uses for this stuff. I've seen some things about nanotech to create diamond hard coatings on plastic lenses. This could be used on glasses, cheap cameras, computer displays and all sorts of things.
what this really means (Score:3, Insightful)
Moral, if you want the benefits of future technology to promote freedon and not take it away, work to get rid of patents today. They hinder far more innovation than they promote, and they are far more like microregulation than some kind of free market property right.
Call me a luddite (Score:3, Insightful)
Banking on the new "IN" term (Score:3, Informative)
Utter BS (Score:2, Interesting)
This is utter BS and should be recognized as the hype that it is. Certainly, nanotech of the materials kind is, and will continue to be important and useful technology. But, how are those little atoms going to machine a precision piston bore in a sleeved cast iron block? Better still, how the heck are those atoms supposed to press that sleeve into the block? Anyone? Anyone
You'll be able to buy one of these... (Score:2)
Better put your deposit down at a dealership today!
~Philly
That's nice (Score:2, Insightful)
probably not. Cars will be as disposible as Cell phones in the future.
Quality (Score:2)
And the junk that the Japanese have been dumping on our shores for years.... Quality cant possibly go down on those recycled rusts-out-in-5-years crap boxes.
A nanotech car (Score:3, Interesting)
The two forms of Nanotechnology (Score:3, Interesting)
1. Using "nano" materials in construction - the more common meaning when people talk about nanotechnology, is when materials manufactured on the small scale give interesting effects and properties used to make a product better in some form
2. Construction on the atomic scale - this is the (in my opinion) real killer-app of technology, where products, materials, literally anything
It's the number 2 usage of nanotechnology that I'm waiting for. If it becomes possible to construct a motor vehicle using the atom-by-atom build process, you can build cars, trucks, whatever for minimal costs. It will of course, be interesting to see how the companies will handle the logistics and pricing strategies
Maybe, but you have your facts wrong (Score:3, Informative)
Development costs are about 1-2k, averaged over the entire build.
We'd typically invoice the dealer for 21k
He pays car tax and so on, that's about 20% of the sticker price, ie 6k. We also pay for some marketing.
Cars have got somewhat more expensive to build, simply because catalysts, engine management co