Network On-Line  

      Activists Newsletter May 2006

homeaboutdownload networkMAG e-mail listscampaignsMAG links

May 2006

Front Page

Down Load Network

Network Front Page

Action Briefing UK

Defend Motorcycling DLD

Crash Barriers

Highway Code Consultation

Charging For Bike Parking

In Memory

In Memory of Donna Proctor

MAG News

New Chair for MAG

Darlington Awarness Day

Success in Northumberland

News

Safety Conference Scotland

Danger In Bike Ban

Houses Versus Motorcycles

Young Drivers - Curfew

Glow In The Dark Motorbike

Green Mini - Car

Ebike Insurance for Cars

Rider Attacked

Other Bits

Health Insurance Card

Butter v Margarine

ANPR - Speed Cameras

Dangerous Camera Makes

Camera Report Contrived

Articles

ISA - A Potential Killer?

Reason or Deceit? - TRF

Worrying Sign of the Times

ID Cards And Issues

Renew Your Passport May

DNA Innocent

Events

Events MAG UK

Farmyard Party

Heart of England

Brum Demo

Welsh Show

Anglesey

Previous Issues

Previous Issues

YAMAHA INVENTS GLOW - IN - THE - DARK MOTORBIKE

Yamaha's EC-02 electric motorbike glows in the dark Luminous coating offers visibility and safety benefits Simon Burns in Taipei, vnunet.com 20 Apr 2006 Yamaha
(http://www.yamaha-motor.co.jp/global/index.html) has developed technology that makes vehicles glow in the dark without requiring a power source.

The new luminous coating will see the light of day on a battery-powered motorbike which is due to go on sale in May, Yamaha Motor Co Ltd announced yesterday in Tokyo.

The Japanese manufacturer has chosen to emphasise the technology's aesthetic appeal rather than its potential visibility and safety benefits.

Yamaha also pointed out that the luminous coating, which is powered by stored solar energy, will be suitable for bicycles.

"The technology enables the exterior to give a more vividly stereoscopic impression of the three-dimensional shape of any surface treated with the film," Kyodo News (http://home.kyodo.co.jp) reported from Japan, citing information supplied by Yamaha.

The first product to use the new technology, a special version of Yamaha's EC-02 electric motorbike, will be launched on 10 May with a price tag of around $1,850.

Photographs (http://www.yamaha-motor.co.jp/news/2006/04/19/film_on_graphics .html) show a large central section of the bike's body glowing with a pale blue-green light. The 47kg mini-motorbike has a range of 40km, a top speed of 30km/h, and a battery recharge time of six hours, according to Akihabara News (http://www.akihabaranews.com/en/news_9456.html).

Owners can charge up the glowing exterior by keeping the vehicle outside during daylight hours. However, after darkness falls, the light emitted by the luminous coating will gradually fade.

The technology is based on a luminous film which is heated and then pressed tightly onto the surface of the vehicle's bodywork using a vacuum process.

Yamaha said that it had to overcome problems with long-term durability and adhesion to make the new coating practical for use on vehicle exteriors.

ED: If the safety Nazis get hold of this idea goodness knows what they will demand.