New Go-Ped high performance stealth scooter could fight crime, traffic — Autoblog Green
It seems Go-Ped has a new secret weapon. An improved variant of their Hoverboard that could help fighting both crime and traffic was just revealed to the company's Facebook fans. The prototype high performance portable patrol vehicle (PPV) takes the fully-suspended American-made stand-up scooter, upgrades most of the components and adds some cool options.
The scooter features one full kilowatt hour (kWh) worth of lithium battery to provide the juice for the T2V3 Torkinator motor that we hear was originally developed for "Robot Wars." The new power plant, combined with a higher sprocket ratio, can take the stealth machine to speeds of 30 miles per hour and handle a 300 lb rider (no doughnut jokes, please). Disk brakes front and back should provide plenty of stopping power. Range is said to be 30 miles and it comes with a nifty wireless remote "Go-Key" to get your journeys started.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments
(
Atom
)
Popular Posts Last Week
-
White-Light Solar Flares Finally Explained Wired Science Wired.com
-
World Water Day: Digging Water Wells in Ghana, West Africa
-
In March, Coca-Cola won its court case to stop a popular and proven 10 cent recycling refund scheme in the Northern Territory -- a program t...
-
According to analyst estimates, by 2020 the LED lighting industry will be close to a $25 billion market worldwide. LED lighting manufacturer...
-
Can shopping save the world? The Story of Change urges viewers to put down their credit cards and start exercising their citizen muscles to ...
-
[ 24/01/2019; 13:00; ] Het onderwerp van de plastic soep in de oceanen staat via de plastic walvis ook uitgebreid op het programma van de Pa...
-
Je wilt graag je steentje bijdragen aan een beter milieu, maar weet niet waar je moet beginnen. Misschien denk je al langer na over zonnepan...
-
Professor Brian Cox explains the power of tectronic faults and reveals an extraordinary discovery on Enceladus, the sixth-largest of the moo...
Popular Posts This Month
-
World Water Day: Digging Water Wells in Ghana, West Africa
-
Can shopping save the world? The Story of Change urges viewers to put down their credit cards and start exercising their citizen muscles to ...
-
Er is te weinig ruimte voor openbaar groen in meer dan de helft van de buurten van de 32 grootste gemeentes in Nederland. Dat concludeert Na...
-
Did you know that most of the discarded garbage ends up in the oceans, forming garbage patches? Environmentalists from the Ellen MacArthur F...
-
IUCN NL en de VBDO ondervroegen vijf banken en dertien vermogens-bezitters en vermogens-beheerders met het hoofdkantoor in Nederland. Ondank...
-
At this year's Hanover Fair Siemens Energy presented smart, eco-friendly solutions for power generation, transmission and distribution. ...
-
Alec Loorz is a 16 year old student at El Camino High School, in Ventura California. He founded Kids vs Global Warming when he was 12 years ...
Popular Posts All Time
-
National Wildlife Federation Naturalist David Mizejewski explores the relationship between sea ice and polar bears. As continued global warm...
-
New York City's current and former mayors highlight the revitalization of lower Manhattan in the days leading up to the 10th anniversary...
-
Leuk idee om de aandacht op een bedrijf te vestigen. Wire & Twine maakte een op zich mooi overzicht van 50 manieren waarmee ze u willen ...
-
In New Orleans: Recovering From a Post-Katrina 'Brain Drain' : News : Breaking : Climate Central
-
NS en Greenwheels lanceren samen de eerste twee Volkswagen e-Golfs. De elektrische deelauto’s zijn vanaf donderdag 13 september te vinden bi...
-
Hundreds of young people converged on the United Nations in New York today as the General Assembly kicked off a high-level meeting devoted t...
-
At IBM's THINK Forum in NYC, Joshua Cooper Ramo, Managing Director, Kissinger Associates comments on not letting the risks of a networke...
-
Persons with disabilities must enjoy full human rights and fundamental freedoms and enabling them to do so benefits society as a whole, Depu...
-
Never before has a time in history been so significant to so many cultures, religions, scientists and governments. Beyond 2012 looks past th...
-
Bridget van Kralingen, General Manager, IBM North America discusses Making the World Work Better at the IBM THINK Forum
No comments :
Post a Comment