Results 1 to 10 of 10

Thread: McClaren to use sound waves to eliminate car windshield wipers..

  1. #1
    Senior Member
    Join Date
    May 2008
    Location
    Westchester NY
    Posts
    1,120

    McClaren to use sound waves to eliminate car windshield wipers..

    Apparently, the technology is now used in fighter jets and the auto company is developing a unit for street cars.

    Does Harman have anything like this? I know they have a foot in on some sound technology to provide ships with a sound-based pirate defense system.

    Is the common stock a buy here? It has done VERY well this year!

    ...just wondering...

  2. #2
    Senior Member
    Join Date
    May 2008
    Location
    Westchester NY
    Posts
    1,120
    ...exciting technology..... I hope Harman makes a bunch from this.

  3. #3
    Moderator hjames's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 2005
    Location
    NoVA - DC 'burbs
    Posts
    8,548
    Quote Originally Posted by robertbartsch View Post
    ...exciting technology..... I hope Harman makes a bunch from this.
    Well, I hope Harman has ANYTHING to do with this technology -
    but so far, I have not seen anything implying that they are involved in any way ...

    http://gizmodo.com/mclaren-is-using-...ree-1484213049

    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencete...ndscreens.html
    2ch: WiiM Pro; Topping E30 II DAC; Oppo, Acurus RL-11, Acurus A200, JBL Dynamics Project - Offline: L212-TwinStack, VonSchweikert VR-4
    7: TIVO, Oppo BDP103D, B&K, 2pr UREI 809A, TF600, JBL B460

  4. #4
    Maron Horonzakz
    Guest
    Non of the fighter jets I flew had windshield wipers,,,At those speeds they would rip off..

  5. #5
    Senior Member
    Join Date
    May 2008
    Location
    Westchester NY
    Posts
    1,120
    Harman (ticker HAR) is up 58% so far during the last 12 months...

  6. #6
    Moderator hjames's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 2005
    Location
    NoVA - DC 'burbs
    Posts
    8,548
    Quote Originally Posted by robertbartsch View Post
    Harman (ticker HAR) is up 58% so far during the last 12 months...
    Which has nothing to do with the sound wiper technology that they are not involved in.
    In truth they've gone from $20 share to $80 share over the last 5 years ...

    Name:  Harman-60mo.png
Views: 576
Size:  27.2 KB
    2ch: WiiM Pro; Topping E30 II DAC; Oppo, Acurus RL-11, Acurus A200, JBL Dynamics Project - Offline: L212-TwinStack, VonSchweikert VR-4
    7: TIVO, Oppo BDP103D, B&K, 2pr UREI 809A, TF600, JBL B460

  7. #7
    Senior Member
    Join Date
    May 2008
    Location
    Westchester NY
    Posts
    1,120
    Yeh, the stock has been preforming very well. The Harman management is making money for the shareholders and that is good!

    I wish they had not made certain decisions, however, including discontinuing legacy kits, moving plants off shore, etc.

  8. #8
    Moderator hjames's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 2005
    Location
    NoVA - DC 'burbs
    Posts
    8,548
    More on the Sonic magic ... Antigravity of small particles!

    http://slashdot.org/topic/datacenter...v-force-field/

    Arrays create a force bubble that levitates small objects and lets them be 'flown' any direction.

    Researchers at the University of Tokyo have published a paper and video describing a technique that is explicitly not an anti-gravity system, and doesn’t pretend to be, but looks very much like one.


    “The essence of levitation is the countervailing of gravity,” according to the provocative opening of a paper published Dec. 14 on the Cornell University science-publishing site arXiv.org that describes a way to not only raise an object into the air, but maneuver it in three dimensions using only standing waves of ultrasound. (Full paper as PDF available here.)


    Since the mid-1970s, researchers have been able to levitate small objects using focused beams of high-frequency sound that bounce off a flat surface and create a wave of pressure that pushes the object into the air. But they couldn’t cause an object to float, and they couldn’t move it around in any direction other than up or down.


    The University of Tokyo team led by Yoichi Ochiai built a system that could raise small particles, water droplets and even “small creatures” off a flat surface and zoom them around within an open, cubical area about 21 inches on each side.


    The system uses four sets of phased arrays – speakers producing focused beams of sound at around 40kHz – to create waves of ultrasonic force on every side of the object rather than just one.


    The force produced by each of the four ultrasound sources can be changed – and the force on the object manipulated – using the same techniques utilized by older systems.


    Coordinating the frequencies and force of ultrasound arrays on four sides, however, creates a consistent focal point for the force from each. By keeping frequency changes in sync, the system creates a “bubble” within which the force from all four sources is consistent no matter where within the target area the focus is directed.


    Once raised off the floor of the target zone, anything wrapped in that bubble of balanced forces has no choice but to move wherever the focal point goes.


    The system does not cancel out gravity or do anything to make a levitated object less susceptible to it, any more than the cables attached to the harness of a Cirque du Soleil acrobat counteracts gravity, inertia or any other force. The beams of ultrasound simply take the place of the cables, pushing on every side with a force at least equal to the weight of the object, making it weightless within that bubble of lift.


    In a video choreographed to Strauss’ Blue Danube, objects (including bits of dry ice, match heads, water droplets and bits of circuit board) waltz individually and in formation until a researcher’s hand pushes them out of the bubble of force and back under the predominantly one-directional influence of gravity, where they fall in a spray to the table’s surface.


    Later versions of the system could use lower frequencies, or lift heavier items, but the approach doesn’t appear to have the promise of more powerful systems, such as magnetic levitation that lifts commuter trains off a single rail and resists g-forces during at speeds approaching 300 miles per hour.


    Coordinated ultrasound levitation is relatively compact and has little impact on systems or objects around it, possibly making it appropriate to move objects under microgravity in a space station or similar environments, the paper suggests.
    2ch: WiiM Pro; Topping E30 II DAC; Oppo, Acurus RL-11, Acurus A200, JBL Dynamics Project - Offline: L212-TwinStack, VonSchweikert VR-4
    7: TIVO, Oppo BDP103D, B&K, 2pr UREI 809A, TF600, JBL B460

  9. #9
    Moderator hjames's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 2005
    Location
    NoVA - DC 'burbs
    Posts
    8,548
    More on the Sonic magic and antigravity of small particles!
    (aka - nothing to do with Harman or Mclaren)

    http://slashdot.org/topic/datacenter...v-force-field/

    Arrays create a force bubble that levitates small objects and lets them be 'flown' any direction.

    Researchers at the University of Tokyo have published a paper and video describing a technique that is explicitly not an anti-gravity system, and doesn’t pretend to be, but looks very much like one.

    “The essence of levitation is the countervailing of gravity,” according to the provocative opening of a paper published Dec. 14 on the Cornell University science-publishing site arXiv.org that describes a way to not only raise an object into the air, but maneuver it in three dimensions using only standing waves of ultrasound. (Full paper as PDF available here.)

    Since the mid-1970s, researchers have been able to levitate small objects using focused beams of high-frequency sound that bounce off a flat surface and create a wave of pressure that pushes the object into the air. But they couldn’t cause an object to float, and they couldn’t move it around in any direction other than up or down.

    The University of Tokyo team led by Yoichi Ochiai built a system that could raise small particles, water droplets and even “small creatures” off a flat surface and zoom them around within an open, cubical area about 21 inches on each side.

    The system uses four sets of phased arrays – speakers producing focused beams of sound at around 40kHz – to create waves of ultrasonic force on every side of the object rather than just one.

    The force produced by each of the four ultrasound sources can be changed – and the force on the object manipulated – using the same techniques utilized by older systems.

    Coordinating the frequencies and force of ultrasound arrays on four sides, however, creates a consistent focal point for the force from each. By keeping frequency changes in sync, the system creates a “bubble” within which the force from all four sources is consistent no matter where within the target area the focus is directed.

    Once raised off the floor of the target zone, anything wrapped in that bubble of balanced forces has no choice but to move wherever the focal point goes.

    The system does not cancel out gravity or do anything to make a levitated object less susceptible to it, any more than the cables attached to the harness of a Cirque du Soleil acrobat counteracts gravity, inertia or any other force. The beams of ultrasound simply take the place of the cables, pushing on every side with a force at least equal to the weight of the object, making it weightless within that bubble of lift.

    In a video choreographed to Strauss’ Blue Danube, objects (including bits of dry ice, match heads, water droplets and bits of circuit board) waltz individually and in formation until a researcher’s hand pushes them out of the bubble of force and back under the predominantly one-directional influence of gravity, where they fall in a spray to the table’s surface.

    Later versions of the system could use lower frequencies, or lift heavier items, but the approach doesn’t appear to have the promise of more powerful systems, such as magnetic levitation that lifts commuter trains off a single rail and resists g-forces during at speeds approaching 300 miles per hour.

    Coordinated ultrasound levitation is relatively compact and has little impact on systems or objects around it, possibly making it appropriate to move objects under microgravity in a space station or similar environments, the paper suggests.
    2ch: WiiM Pro; Topping E30 II DAC; Oppo, Acurus RL-11, Acurus A200, JBL Dynamics Project - Offline: L212-TwinStack, VonSchweikert VR-4
    7: TIVO, Oppo BDP103D, B&K, 2pr UREI 809A, TF600, JBL B460

  10. #10
    Senior Member Eaulive's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2009
    Location
    Back in Montreal
    Posts
    1,289
    All modern DSLR cameras have ultrasonic sensor cleaning... I don't know if it could be applied to windshields
    My avatar: 4520 loaded with 2225H on E140 frames,
    1x 2202H on custom front loaded horn, 2x 2426 on 2370.

Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

Similar Threads

  1. JBL67000 ranked 4th in 2012-2013 stereo sound golden sound award
    By martin_wu99 in forum General Audio Discussion
    Replies: 46
    Last Post: 06-05-2013, 10:38 AM
  2. Replies: 6
    Last Post: 02-28-2011, 10:30 AM
  3. Internal standing waves?
    By oznob in forum General Audio Discussion
    Replies: 8
    Last Post: 04-01-2008, 07:27 PM
  4. Parallel box walls and standing waves
    By Jakob in forum Lansing Product Technical Help
    Replies: 3
    Last Post: 06-07-2007, 03:16 AM

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •