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Gaetano's Posts

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PoliticsRe: Obiano Procures 315 Drums Chemical Foam AFFF Tridol For State Fire Service by gaetano: 8:39am On Nov 01, 2019
Chai! Some guys don blow. I'm sure the next time I'll enter market, I'll see traders selling this chemical in the black market grin grin
CrimeRe: Umar Faruq: Abducted Hausa Boy Now Speaks Igbo, Dumps Islam, Adopts Christianity by gaetano: 8:12am On Nov 01, 2019
Let's tackle the root of the problem.

The amajiri system in the North breeds chaos for us all. Men marrying multiple wives and breeding children like rats and then leaving them to fend for themselves without any plans for them. These kids have become easy targets as Boko Haram gets their recruits daily from there,
bandits gets theirs recruits from there. Kidnappers get their Merchandise from there in which they trade to other african countries for slavery and trade to mothers who don't have kids down south. Fix the amajiri system and you've fixed most of the problem
PoliticsRe: Governor Obiano Restricts Movement Of Tankers Carrying Petrol From 8pm To 5am by gaetano: 8:11am On Nov 01, 2019
johnpablo541:
That's not true. Fuel tankers move during the day time in developed countries.
They move by rail during the day. But by tankers at night. It's like that in the UK
CrimeRe: EFCC Invades OOU, FUNAAB, MAPOLY, Abducts Students by gaetano: 7:46am On Nov 01, 2019
Innocent students will be affected.
PoliticsRe: Governor Obiano Restricts Movement Of Tankers Carrying Petrol From 8pm To 5am by gaetano: 7:39am On Nov 01, 2019
In developed countries they are not allowed movement during the day. Only allowed at night.
PoliticsRe: Debt Servicing Gulps N8 Trillion As FG Seeks More Loans by gaetano:
FG will take new loans so they can use it to service old loans. Instead of them to create an enabling environment for businesses to thrive so more businesses can come in. Currently there is multiple taxation in which the current structure is enabling. Businesses are taxed at the federal, state and local government levels. A restructured govt will help address development issues and harmonize tax which the fg will take its percentage like its done in every country. This system is dragging us back and underdeveloping alot of states with mineral resources that need federal approval before mining.
BusinessRe: GSM Market, Maiduguri On Fire (Video) by gaetano:
All of a sudden markets are now on fire all over. Beginning to look more like a deliberate attack to me
CrimeRe: EFCC Arraigns Two For Cybercrime (Photos) by gaetano: 10:04pm On Oct 31, 2019
undecided
CrimeRe: 2 Children Kidnapped In Gombe, Found In Anambra by gaetano: 10:04pm On Oct 31, 2019
undecided
TravelRe: Nigeria, Vietnam Sign Visa Waiver Deal For Diplomatic, Official Passport Holders by gaetano: 9:58pm On Oct 31, 2019
CaptainMeks:
It is a first step to other things that entail strengthening the trade and diplomatic ties between Nigeria and Vietnam. It could also be a first step to having them set up shop in Nigeria thus creating employment for Nigerians.

Think far and wide and not in a myopic fashion
for holders of valid diplomatic and official passports.

While other countries make sure all their citizens benefit from such development, Your politicians made sure its strictly for only them to enjoy.
BusinessRe: Dangote Refinery Rules Out 2020, As Refinery Gets New Date by gaetano: 8:53pm On Oct 31, 2019
By the year he officially commissions it, all his potential targets would have gone electric grin
TravelRe: Dilapidated Nature Of Ijoko Road, Ifo LG And Itoki Road In Ogun State by gaetano: 8:50pm On Oct 31, 2019
Chineke! It's a lie, this is aba jor grin grin
PoliticsRe: 'Nnamdi Kanu Will Return To Nigeria To Face Trial If His Safety Is Guaranteed' by gaetano: 2:37pm On Oct 31, 2019
post=83626632:
Nnamdi......
I'm going to call u out on this platform. See what I ordered and what you delivered. You are just a big a scam as Buhari. You better refund my money and close your BBQ business angry

PoliticsRe: Nnamdi Kanu Gives Condition For Returning To Nigeria To Face Trial by gaetano: 2:02pm On Oct 31, 2019
Where's that guy? I'm going to call u out on this platform. See what I ordered and what you delivered. You are just a big a scam as Buhari. You better refund my money angry

CrimeRe: Two South African Armed Robbers Flee After Messing With The Wrong Guys by gaetano: 1:45pm On Oct 31, 2019
They will still claim They are Nigerian drug dealers
PoliticsRe: Ajax FC Aka The Jews by gaetano: 1:00pm On Oct 31, 2019
ODB2:
He will thank me for not being a fool

God created him intact and you think by cutting ones foreskin in a Jewish superstition will make him whole?

Idiot.

My future daughter in-law will be grateful that I as her father in-law gave her a complete man and not some mutilated slave .


Circumcise your daughter , you slave to a jew rat
medical reasons – for example, as a treatment of last resort for conditions such as a tight foreskin (phimosis) or recurrent infection of the foreskin and head of the penis (balanitis)

religious or cultural reasons – it's a common practice in Jewish and Islamic communities, and it's also practised by many African communities; most cultural circumcisions are carried out in young boys

dude forget about the religious reasons and focus on the medical reasons for circumcision.

PoliticsNigerian Senate Summons Buratai Over 'Operation Positive Identification' by gaetano(op):
“We will not support any action or policy that would either cause inconveniences for Nigerians or tamper with their fundamental human rights which include freedom of movement."

The Senate has rejected the controversial ‘Operation Positive Identification’ exercise being planned across the country planned by the Nigerian Army.

Chairman of the Senate Committee on Army, Senator Ali Ndume, on Wednesday, told journalists in his office that such exercise was not acceptable to the federal lawmakers being the true representatives of the people.

Ndume said, “Although the Chief of Army Staff had described the alert as fake as representatives of the people, we have summoned him to come and clarify it to Nigerians.

“We will not support any action or policy that would either cause inconveniences for Nigerians or tamper with their fundamental human rights which include freedom of movement.

“A similar exercise was done in the North-East and the people did not complain simply because the area is suffering great insurgency. It is not the case with other parts of the country.

The House of Representatives on Tuesday also rejected the operation and called on President Muhammadu Buhari to stop the planned Operation Positive Identification by the military.
http://saharareporters.com/2019/10/31/nigerian-senate-summons-army-chief-buratai-over-operation-positive-identification
CrimeRe: Two South African Armed Robbers Flee After Messing With The Wrong Guys by gaetano: 10:17am On Oct 31, 2019
Nooooo i disagreeeeee. Those are Nigerian drug dealers grin
CelebritiesRe: Don Jazzy And Rema Visit EA Sport Center In US (Photos) by gaetano: 8:34am On Oct 31, 2019
So that's how that God win guy was relegated shocked
TravelRe: International Wing Of Kano Airport (Photos) by gaetano: 7:53am On Oct 31, 2019
U
AutosRe: Man Invents Electric Car Battery That Will Take Drivers 2,415km Before Charging by gaetano(op): 7:46am On Oct 31, 2019
The Nigerian government have no plans for the future, instead they are still searching for oil up north while our potential buyers are moving towards cleaner energy. This invention will shatter so many tables
AutosMan Invents Electric Car Battery That Will Take Drivers 2,415km Before Charging by gaetano(op): 7:34am On Oct 31, 2019
Ex-Navy officer turned inventor signs a multi-million deal to produce his electric car battery that will take drivers 1,500 miles without needing to charge

Imagine the satisfaction of driving your environmentally friendly electric car for 1,500 miles without having to stop to recharge the battery – a distance more than four times as far as the best and most expensive model currently on the road.

Under the bonnet is a revolutionary new type of battery which, unlike those used in conventional electric cars, can also power buses, huge lorries and even aircraft. What's more, it's far simpler and cheaper to make than the batteries currently in use in millions of electric vehicles around the world – and, unlike them, it can easily be recycled.

This might sound like a science-fiction fantasy. But it's not. Last Friday, the battery's inventor, British engineer and former Royal Navy officer Trevor Jackson, signed a multi-million-pound deal to start manufacturing the device on a large scale in the UK.

Austin Electric, an engineering firm based in Essex, which now owns the rights to use the old Austin Motor Company logo, will begin putting thousands of them into electric vehicles next year. According to Austin's chief executive, Danny Corcoran, the new technology is a 'game-changer'.

'It can help trigger the next industrial revolution. The advantages over traditional electric vehicle batteries are enormous,' he said.

Few will have heard of Jackson's extraordinary invention. The reason, he says, is that since he and his company Metalectrique Ltd came up with a prototype a decade ago, he has faced determined opposition from the automobile industry establishment.

It has every reason not to give ground to a competitor that may, in time, render its own technology obsolete. Car industry sceptics claim Trevor's technology is unproven, and its benefits exaggerated.

But an independent evaluation by the Government agency UK Trade and Investment said in 2017 that it was a 'very attractive battery' based on 'well established' technology, and that it produced much more energy per kilogram than standard electric vehicle types.

Two years ago, Jackson claims, motor manufacturers lobbied the Foreign Office to bar him from a prestigious conference for European businesses and governments at the British embassy in Paris, which was supposed to agree a blueprint for ensuring all new cars are electric by 2040. The bid to exclude him failed. Now, with the signing of the Austin deal, it seems he is finally on the road to success.

He has also secured a £108,000 grant for further research from the Advanced Propulsion Centre, a partner of the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills. His technology has been validated by two French universities.

He says: 'It has been a tough battle but I'm finally making progress. From every logical standpoint, this is the way to go.'

Jackson began working on new ways of powering electric vehicles after a distinguished engineering career. He worked for Rolls-Royce in Derby, helping to design nuclear reactors, then took a commission in the Royal Navy, where he served as a lieutenant on board nuclear submarines, managing and maintaining their reactors.

Before founding his own firm in 1999, he was working for BAE Systems, where he first started looking at alternative, green ways to power vehicles. By then he and his partner, Kathryn, were married. The couple have eight children, aged 11 to 27, and live in Tavistock, on the edge of Dartmoor in Devon.

In 2001 he began to investigate the potential of a technology first developed in the 1960s. Scientists had discovered that by dipping aluminium into a chemical solution known as an electrolyte, they could trigger a reaction between the metal and air to produce electricity. At that time the method was useless for commercial batteries because the electrolyte was extremely poisonous, and caustic.

After years of experimentation at his workshop in the Cornish village of Callington, Jackson's eureka moment came when he developed a new formula for the electrolyte that was neither poisonous nor caustic.

'I've drunk it when demonstrating it to investors, so I can attest to the fact that it's harmless,' Jackson says. Another problem with the 1960s version was that it worked only with totally pure aluminium, which is very expensive.

But Jackson's electrolyte works with much lower-purity metal – including recycled drinks cans. The formula, which is top secret, is the key to his device.

Technically, it should be described as a fuel cell, not a battery. Either way, it is so light and powerful that it could now be set to revolutionise low-carbon transport, because it supplies so much energy.

Jackson gave me a demonstration. He cut off the top of a can of Coke, drained it, filled it with the electrolyte, and clipped electrodes to it, powering a small propeller. 'The energy in this will keep the propeller spinning for a month,' he said. 'You can see what this technology could do in a vehicle if you scale it up.' Following last week's deal with Austin, that is exactly what is about to happen. Three immediate projects are about to go into production.

The first is to manufacture for the Asian market some 'tuk-tuks' – the three-wheeler taxis used by the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge last week during their Royal visit to Pakistan. The second is to make electric bikes, which will be cheaper and run for much longer than those made by rivals.

Finally, and most importantly, the firm is to produce kits to convert ordinary petrol and diesel cars into hybrids, by fitting them with aluminium-air cells and electric motors on the rear wheels.

A driver will be able to choose whether to run the car on fossil fuel or electricity. The cost of each conversion, Jackson says, will be about £3,500, and they will be available early next year. This, he adds, will be the stepping-stone to a full-blown electric vehicle powered by aluminium-air fuel cells. The car industry has already poured massive investment into a very different type of battery, lithium-ion.

Also found in devices such as computers and mobile phones, lithium-ion batteries are rechargeable. Almost every electric vehicle on the road uses them. But they have big drawbacks. As well as lithium, they contain rare, poisonous substances such as cobalt. They can explode or catch fire, as seen with the spate of incidents that forced Samsung to recall tens of thousands of Galaxy Note 7 phones in 2016.
With repeated charging, car-sized models eventually become spent. Recycling them to recover the cobalt and lithium is extremely expensive – about five times as much as the cost of disposing them and starting from scratch.

Aluminium, on the other hand, is the planet's most abundant metal. Many of the factories that refine it from ore or recycled junk are powered by green, renewable energy, such as hydro-electric dams.

And once an aluminium-air fuel cell is spent, it can be recycled very cheaply. According to Jackson, the cost of recycling means the running costs of an aluminium-air powered car would work out at 7p per mile. The cost of a small hatchback's petrol comes to around 12p per mile. More important, lithium-ion batteries are heavy.

Accredited tests have shown that, weight for weight, Jackson's fuel cell produces nine times as much energy as lithium-ion: nine times as many kilowatt hours of electricity per kilogram. The luxury electric car maker Tesla says its model S has a range of 370 miles from one charge. Jackson says that if you drove the same car with an aluminium-air cell that weighed the same as the lithium-ion battery, the range would be 2,700 miles. Aluminium-air cells also take up less space.

Jackson claims that if the Tesla were fitted with an aluminium-air fuel cell that was the same size as its current battery, it could run non-stop for 1,500 miles – almost enough to get from Land's End to John O'Groats and back again. An average British family – whose car will travel 7,900 miles annually – would need to change their fuel cell only a handful of times each year.

Scientists call the weight-to- energy ratio 'energy density'. According to Jackson, because aluminium-air fuel cells have a much greater density than lithium-ion batteries, they could be used in buses or big trucks. If powered by lithium-ion, such vehicles would be unfeasibly heavy, with the battery weighing as much as the freight.

He says: 'You could easily stack numerous cells in this type of vehicle – after all, getting rid of their diesel fuel tanks will give you plenty of space.' Jackson adds that aluminium-air cells could also be used in aircraft. 'We are in discussions with two aircraft manufacturers. It's not going to be suitable for jets. But it would work in propeller planes, and be suitable for short-haul passenger and cargo flights.'

Meanwhile, the raw cost of a new aluminium-air cell is much lower.

In a Tesla, Jackson says, the battery costs about £30,000. An aluminium-air fuel cell that would power the same car for longer would cost just £5,000.

Drivers with cars that depend on lithium-ion have to charge their batteries from the mains when they are spent – a process that takes a long time, often overnight. But when an aluminium-air cell became exhausted, the driver would simply exchange it for a new one.

Instead of a vast network of charging points, all that is necessary are stores where cells can be swapped, just as people already swap propane gas bottles.

Swapping a battery, says Jackson, takes about 90 seconds.

He and Corcoran say they are in 'advanced discussions' with two major supermarket chains to provide this facility.

Last week, Sir James Dyson announced he was scrapping his plans to make electric cars because he had come to the conclusion they were not commercially viable, even though he had invested millions.

'The problem is,' says Jackson, 'he was using lithium-ion. If his cars had been based on aluminium-air fuel cells, the outcome might have been different.'

Ironically, Jackson's story so far bears more than a passing resemblance to Dyson's.

Dyson developed his bagless vacuum cleaner at a workshop at his home, supported by his wife.

And just as Jackson has had to battle the vested interests of the big motor companies, it took Dyson ten years to break through commercially, because no distributor or existing manufacturer was prepared to upset the lucrative market for dust bags.

'Everyone knows that if we are really going to hit the Government's target of net zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050, the hardest nut to crack is transport,' Jackson says. 'We're just not going to do that with lithium-ion. Apart from anything else, it's no use for trucks, which burn vast amounts of fossil fuel.

'I know we are battling ferocious vested interests but the technological and environmental advantages of aluminium-air are overwhelming – and Britain has a chance to become the world leader in it.'

PoliticsRe: LASG Set To Auction Vehicles Impounded For Violation Of Traffic Law by gaetano: 7:40pm On Oct 30, 2019
chinchum:
In a major city like Lagos. Stiffer penalties are needed. Any time some one starts driving facing a traffic, such driver is on a mission to kill or be killed. A driver caught doing that should not have a driving license anymore. In a country like Nigeria where anyone can access driving license. Auctioning the seized car will hit hard.
No. Things are hard in the country. Make the penalty 500k. If they pay it once, it will hit them hard.
PoliticsRe: LASG Set To Auction Vehicles Impounded For Violation Of Traffic Law by gaetano: 7:17pm On Oct 30, 2019
chinchum:
Any one who drives facing traffic is most likely mad, except for rare occasions of medical emergencies(life and death situation).
That doesn't mean their cars should be auctioned
CrimeRe: Driver Uses His Car Horn To Scare Away Armed Robbers by gaetano: 5:34pm On Oct 30, 2019
It's fake, watch the video again, there was smoke very close to the electric pole by the right. It's either those were fireworks or the whole thing is just scripted.
PoliticsRe: LASG Set To Auction Vehicles Impounded For Violation Of Traffic Law by gaetano:
Drkeo:
Nigerians need harsh hands
Nah, this is dictatorship. Wait till someone related to you gets affected.
CelebritiesRe: Yemi Alade Wows In Bikini In Kenya (Photos) by gaetano: 10:22pm On Oct 29, 2019
Yemi Eberechi Alade the Flatonja cool
CelebritiesRe: Regina Daniels, Ned Nwoko Take Their Vacation To Jordan (photo) by gaetano: 7:17pm On Oct 29, 2019
iamJ:
No Alex reports in sight


Wetin happen?


Broda no get passport?
Alex is now busy selling awards to the rest of West Africa
CrimeRe: Meet Dr. Hassan Yusuf At 'Islamic Rehabilitation Centre' by gaetano: 2:06pm On Oct 29, 2019
The rest of us ain't supposed to be n thesame country with these people
PoliticsRe: How Will Brexit Affect Nigeria? by gaetano: 7:24am On Oct 29, 2019
Astark:
UK economic power is long gone.

USA, China control the world now
And Germany controls Europe
PoliticsRe: How Will Brexit Affect Nigeria? by gaetano: 7:23am On Oct 29, 2019
undecided
EducationRe: Waliyu Olajide Ganiyu Original WAEC Result Lost But Found by gaetano: 3:35pm On Oct 28, 2019
You can check Facebook

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