• Hey Guest. Check out your NeoGAF Wrapped 2025 results here!

Update on Carbon Nanotubes

Status
Not open for further replies.
Before this advance in CNT creation, the TVs were said to cost as low as $400USD to produce.....

Of course they won't sell for that much but if they can make lots and lots of them easily, then the promise of <$1000 HDTVs will be a reality...

The very first FED will the the Toshiba SED, which goes into pilot production this month in Japan....they will go on sale early next year and CNT FEDs should be about a year behind the Toshiba SED and just about everybody is developing them, including:

The Tiwanese Govt.
Motorola
Hitachi
Pioneer
Matsushita
Sony
Samsung


And some small startups too....
 
1 Space elevator pls

kthx

oh, and nano cars for super effciency

edit: god damnit I knew this would turn to TV talk :(

Buckminster would be appalled
 
scola said:
1 Space elevator pls

kthx

oh, and nano cars for super effciency

edit: god damnit I knew this would turn to TV talk :(

Buckminster would be appalled

Yeah, the space elevator is my most anticipated application of this. I was reading an article about it in some trade magazine my father gets. The author was commissioned by some administrative body to do a study on how feasible the thing is, but unfortunately it seems as though it will be at least another ten to twenty years before we see one. Another interesting but unrelated technology that would apparently go into the space elevator is a huge laser that would be mounted on the anchor station, which would power the crawlers by shining on some special photocells pointing back down at the Earth. The lasers actually haven't been successfully built either, but they're pretty close.

The article even went into some detail on how relatively insignificant the threats from ribbon disasters would be. In the worst case scenario, where terrorists detonated a bomb on a crawler that was nearing the counterweight, thus severing the ribbon at the top, the counterweight would fly off into space, and most of the ribbon would burn up as it came down. What was left wouldn't be all that hard to clean up in the long run.

The best part of it all is that, with the first elevator built, the costs of moving objects into space would decrease from the current ~$200,000/kg to about $200. Having one elevator up would make building additional elevators even easier, and once you have a few elevators up, the payload costs drop significantly further.

We can start building space warships!
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Top Bottom