#Hyrbid
Will Toyota Beat The Rare-Earth Material Bottleneck?
Bloomberg reports that Toyota’s engineers have reached an “advanced stage” of research on a new “induction”-type electric motor which holds the promise of freeing the Japanese automaker from dependence on so-called rare-earth materials. These elements, including neodymium and dysprosium, are used to strengthen the magnets used in traditional electric motors and generators, and are crucial to the production of everything from electric and hybrid cars to wind turbines and guided missiles. China currently controls over 90 percent of the world’s supply of rare-earth materials, and has recently cut exports quotas, raising tensions between China and Japan.
Edward Niedermeyer
Jan 15, 2011
17
What's Wrong With This Picture: The Porsche CAFE Edition
Who’s afraid of t he 2016 CAFE standard ramp-up? Not the gas-electric hybrid Porsche 918 Spyder Concept. With 0-60 in 3.2 seconds from a racing-derive…
Read more
Edward Niedermeyer
Mar 01, 2010
14
Recent Comments