Stunning translucent motorcycle concept allows you to see the chassis through its bodywork!

Always trust a concept automobile to push the boundaries of design.

Remember the Mercedes Benz GINA? A concept car that was literally made with cloth bodywork?? Well, the Polestar Aegis concept builds on that idea by employing a flexible plastic paneling that gives the bike a bizarrely beautiful aesthetic. The Aegis is literally translucent, as the plastic panels that cover the top and bottom of the bike allow you to literally see the chassis through them. Designed as an entry for the Polestar design challenge on Instagram, the Aegis concept follows the competition brief of showcasing ‘purity and performance’.

The Aegis comes with a relatively robust chassis design that doesn’t just act as a framework for the bike’s structure, it literally defines the bike’s aesthetic as two flat translucent plastic panels fold over and fix to the chassis, becoming the bike’s body. The translucent nature of the plastic allows you to see the Aegis’ muscular frame through it, while the entire bodywork sort of acts as a massive mudguard for the entire motorcycle. Rather than washing your bike every week or two, just take the plastic sheets off and hose them down!

There’s something really exquisite about the way the translucent shell defines the Aegis. It’s a textbook interpretation of purity, but at the same time, the fact that it showcases the motorcycle’s inner mechanisms almost reinforces the fact. The folded 2D paneling also imparts a low-poly aesthetic to the bike, giving it the purity of form too. In fact, there’s another hidden detail that I really can’t seem to ignore. The Aegis’ outline changes the minute you sit on the bike. The upper translucent panel comes with a single continuous curve on the top, but the minute a rider sits on it, the panel flexes to adjust to the biker’s curvature, buckling to form a 3D curved surface.

Clearly, the Aegis is just a concept (the same way the Mercedes Benz GINA was a concept too), but it really explores an angle that’s achievable and could actually make sense. What if you just had stripped-down motorcycles that came with flexible paneling that you yourself could attach and replace like a phone’s outer case? It would be easy to clean, wouldn’t dent or scratch the way metal would (you could just easily replace it too), and for my anti-plastic posse, I’m sure we could find a polymer (I’m leaning towards Polycarbonate) that’s easy to use/recycle and can also withstand any heat coming from the engine nearby.

Designer: Lukas Lambrichts

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Sharp unveils semi-transparent solar panels, lets you see the sun while reaping its benefits

Sharp unveils semi-transparent solar panels, lets you see the sun while reaping its benefits

Sharp has announced an unusual photovoltaic panel for the Japanese market that collects energy from the sun while still allowing the light to shine on through. Though it's rated at a lowly 6.8 percent / 98 watt max efficiency, the glass-like properties make it useful as a construction material (as shown in the balcony railing above), with the semi-transparent nature giving occupants privacy, to boot. The energy-producing cells are embedded in a laminated glass structure and an air slot provides a thermal barrier, allowing the panels to also be used as "windows, curtain wall and eaves" according to Sharp's PR. Though the system won't win any potency prizes, it has garnered a design award in Japan, so it won't blight any landscapes. There's no mention of pricing or western availability so far, but you can hit the source for all the technical details.

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Sharp unveils semi-transparent solar panels, lets you see the sun while reaping its benefits originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 26 Sep 2012 05:18:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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UCLA creates transparent solar cell, dreams of current generating windows

UCLA creates transparent solar cell, dreams of current generating windows

Transparent photovoltaics have yet to grace the face of your smartphone, but don't give up hope -- UCLA researchers are working on a new see-through solar cell that's showing potential. Using a new type of polymer solar cell, the team has been able to build a device that converts infrared light into electrical current. Current prototypes boast 4 percent energy conversion efficiency at 66 percent transparency -- not crystal clear, but certainly clean enough to peer through. According to a study in ACS Nano, the technology could be used in "building-integrated photovoltaics or integrated photovoltaic chargers for portable electronics." Translation? It could one day be used to build solar windows or better sun collecting smartphones. Don't get too excited though, the technology still has a ways to go before any of these dreams come to fruition. Still, feel free to head past the break for the team's official press release, or skip to the source to take in the full academic study.

Continue reading UCLA creates transparent solar cell, dreams of current generating windows

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UCLA creates transparent solar cell, dreams of current generating windows originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 22 Jul 2012 03:16:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceACS Nano  | Email this | Comments

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