EEStor - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
EEStor is a company based in Cedar Park, Texas, United States that claims to have developed a revolutionary new type of capacitor for electricity storage, which EEStor calls the ...
ZENN - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The EEStor Technology Agreement also provides ZMC with non-exclusive, worldwide use to manufacture higher power and heavier vehicles. About half of Zenn's IPO was used to invest in ...
New Patent Reveals Details of EEStor’s Ultracapacitor Technology ...
A newly-granted US patent (PDF) for the upcoming ultracapacitor technology from secretive Texas-based EEStor contains a ton of detailed information about their near-mythical ...
EEStor | Cleantech Group
September 15, 2009 - by Emma Ritch - Managing Partner Ray Lane won't spill the beans, but he says the $39,000 car for the U.S. market is not an electric ...
Clean Break » EEStor
My Clean Break column today is a bit of an update on ZENN Motor, the potential of EEStor’s EESU, and an interesting comment about EEStor from Elon Musk, co-founder and CEO of ...
Super Secretive Supercapacitor CEO Tells All in Leaked Phone Call ...
eestor-powered Zenn electric car In what appears to be a huge leak, the notoriously secretive Dick Weir of Eestor did a phone call with someone that got out, copied, transcribed ...
The Long Ranger: EEStor's EV Ultra-Capacitor
(Enlarge photo) A Zenn NEV (Neighborhood Electric Vehicle), which will soon run on EEStor's new ultra-capacitor. (Photo courtesy of Zenn Motor Company)
Electricity storage | Ne plus ultra | Economist.com
This article is premium content. In order to gain access to it please either Log in, Activate your complimentary web account if you are a print subscriber, or Subscribe now
EEStor Announces Production Milestones
Breakthrough ceramic ultra capacitor (battery) technology company announces two key production milestones: proving of their automated production line, and third party validation ...
Clean Break » 2007 » November » 01
Is EEStor’s ultracapacitor-based storage device for real? Will it meet its ambitious — some would say unrealistic — claims? And even if it does, can we realistically expect ...
