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Car Tech, Green Tech

Airbus Unveils Carbon Fiber Plane




You know that weird, checkered material you see used in cars, bikes, and sporting gear? It's called carbon fiber, and it's super light. Now, Airbus has rolled out its newest plane, made mostly of the material. The result, though still not quite friendly-skies-friendly, could become the way forward for an airline industry suffering from high oil prices and extensive financial problems.

"Making wings out of carbon fiber cuts the fuel consumption by at least 20%," said Dave Phipps, head of Airbus' carbon fiber research department at Filton, UK. "It's a revolutionary technology. It is so much lighter, and yet just as strong and just as safe."

The tech has been in the works for over two decades – mainly for safety concerns. "Dealing with lightning strikes is much harder," says Professor Philip Lawrence, aviation expert at the University of the West of England. "Every time you cut a hole to fit electronics the structure of the wing is affected and joins between metal and carbon fiber can be tricky."

Which leads us to our closing and rather delicious pun: If the technology takes off, it could be lightning in a bottle for the airline biz. [Source: BBC]

Cell Phones

LG's Sexy New Phone Offers Glass, Carbon Fiber, Mystique

LG's Sexy New Phone offers Glass, Carbon Fiber, Mystique

LG is going into full tease mode, releasing an image capturing the angles of what's to be the next model in its Black Label line. The details are few, but the mobile pictured above is a lithe slider set for worldwide release over the summer and third quarter of the year. It's slim and dark (a stark contrast to the gold and gaudy 'Ironman' phone), with a case made of nearly indestructible carbon fiber and a touchscreen of glass (reinforced for pocket duty). On the back, it packs a five-megapixel camera with a little flash, the thinnest phone with such offerings.

Nothing else is known at this point, including when exactly it will be hitting the U.S., what it will cost, or what name or model number it will have, but you can be sure we'll be keeping an eye out for it.

From Engadget

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