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Transportation Science Technology

New Coating Technology Promises Self-Cleaning Cars 88

Zothecula writes "Nissan's "Scratch Guard Coat" has been healing fine scratches on the company's cars for a few years now, and the technology has also made its way into an iPhone case. More recent developments have produced coatings to heal more substantial scratches and scrapes using nano-capsules. Now researchers at The Netherlands' Eindhoven University of Technology (TU/e) have developed a coating that is not only self-healing, but also promises to free car owners of the tiresome chore of washing the car ."
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New Coating Technology Promises Self-Cleaning Cars

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  • by gameboyhippo ( 827141 ) on Monday July 23, 2012 @01:44PM (#40738827) Journal

    I just leave it out in the middle of a rain storm and it comes out shiny and clean!

  • You know, of course, that mankind's lazy desire for truly self-cleaning surfaces will be what leads us to destruction at the teeny, tiny, hands of the nanite plague...

    Just a minor nanite-layer replication error and the next user to touch that self-cleaning toilet seat will be converted directly into a lemony-fresh slurry. It'll be all downhill from there.

    • It will come from an army or some factory first. Self cleaning surfaces have no need for reproduction, but weapons and industrial equipment have (ok, exponential factories reproduce in a much safer way, if they actualy work).

    • by EdIII ( 1114411 )

      the next user to touch that self-cleaning toilet seat will be converted directly into a lemony-fresh slurry

      For some users that I know that will be about as useful as they have been their whole lives.

    • Just a minor nanite-layer replication error and the next user to touch that self-cleaning toilet seat will be converted directly into a lemony-fresh slurry. It'll be all downhill from there.

      I've never heard that Soylent Green was lemony fresh. Learn something every day.

  • It's the inside that's the problem!

    It's the inside that's the problem!

    It's the inside that's the problem!

    Gosh! Money laying on the ground people.

  • by PolygamousRanchKid ( 1290638 ) on Monday July 23, 2012 @02:02PM (#40739061)

    Just program it up to drive to the car wash, drive through it, and drive back home.

    If Google adds functionality enabling it to pick up stuff at fast food drive-ins, we're all set for life.

  • This will never happen in the States.
    The carwash political lobbyists and Unite Carwash Labor Employees of America Now! (UCLEAN) will bury this technology.

    Look what happened to the 100mpg ICE engine.

    Won't somebody think of the car wash towels dryers!!
  • I'm wondering if this technology might be used on my brother-in-law.

  • In the coming weeks lobbyists from the car wash industry, every organization that does a fund raiser car wash and probably from that guy on the street corner that will wash your entire car with Windex for $2 will be decrying this terrible innovation in auto paint. This stuff will lead to nano apocalypse, lost revenue and general dissatisfaction with life. Someone think of the children too!
    • Fund raiser car washes... you just have to do them like this [wordpress.com]

      as for the guys who wash your windscreen and demand $2 later.. like having a clean windscreen is going to stop them.

  • by CohibaVancouver ( 864662 ) on Monday July 23, 2012 @02:50PM (#40739783)

    also promises to free car owners of the tiresome chore of washing the car

    Having children is also another way to accomplish this, albeit at much greater cost. Once I (and my siblings) turned 10, my parents never washed a vehicle again (until we left the house).

    "Dad, can I watch TV?"
    "No. Now go wash the car."

  • That market consists of men who want to watch girls in bikini's get lathered up and sprayed down.

    • I suppose you've never lived in a place where they dump salt on the roads in the winter?

      Around here EVERYONE shows up at the car wash on a warm spring day.

  • what about:

    - dead bugs

    - tree sap

    - particles of hot patch

    there is no possible way to keep these things from sticking. These things require physical scraping and nasty solvents to remove, even from a brand new shiny slick paint finish.

  • Cats always had self cleaning technology. Are they adopting it for car use? Would it mean the car could cough up dirt balls?
  • by Solandri ( 704621 ) on Monday July 23, 2012 @03:51PM (#40740731)
    They coated the outside of the laptop with it, giving it a slightly rubbery/felt-like texture. Whereas regular plastic laptop lids picked up scratches from being slid in and out of cases, on the Thinkpad you could simply rub these scratches out. Dunno of Lenovo still uses it. I first learned of it when I complained to a friend that my Thinkpad had picked up a lot of scratches over the years. He told me about the coating, so I spent about 15 minutes rubbing and it looked nearly as good as new.

    I mention this before the Apple fans start claiming Apple "pioneered" the use of such coatings in computers.
  • It will kill the summer time tradition of girls having a "bikini car wash". Oh the humanity!
  • I'm wondering why no one makes a 'dimpled' car, a la Mythbusters [autoblog.com]. Seem like a good idea for a fiberglass 'kit car' manufacturer.
  • I just let my car remain dirty. In addition to being easier, this leaves a protective layer of dirt covering the paint film. (I do remove bird droppings, however)

  • and ask how many people are employed in a carwash worldwide ?

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