Robot could let cops give you a ticket without exiting their cruiser

An engineering firm is trying to launch a new RoboCop our words, not theirs that will help keep officers safe in the line of duty.Instead of protecting the city from the Dad in That ’70s Show, though, the purpose of this RoboCop is strictly giving people tickets. The system, affixed perhaps ironically to the front of a Toyota Prius for testing, works by extending the little android officer on a track alongside the vehicle being pulled over.The computer features a camera, printer and a screen where the driver can see the officer sitting in his car. Aww, it even wears a little helmet, how cute.What isnt so cute is the row of spike strips the robot deploys underneath the vehicle to prevent any thoughts of escape entering the drivers mind.This new police robot could make traffic stops safer for everyone. pic.twitter.com/70YnFy672w Autoblog (@therealautoblog) July 24, 2019According to Autoblog, the project started in the basement of engineer Rueben Brewer, but eventually got picked up by a company called SRI International, which hopes to turn it into reality.The idea is to provide a buffer between the officer and the people in the vehicle who might want to do them harm. Or just to make day-to-day tasks like giving people speeding tickets and hassling them about taillights easier.While this is just a prototype, you can expect if it actually takes off that it won’t be attached to a Prius, which couldnt catch a one-legged child on a bicycle. Were just glad the first step for the RoboCop was to give people tickets and didnt involve shooting an inventor and tossing him out of a 30-storey
Origin: Robot could let cops give you a ticket without exiting their cruiser

Mustang from ‘Tokyo Drift’ for sale, but without Nissan RB26 engine

One of the 1967 Ford Mustangs used in the third instalment of the will-it-ever-end Fast Furious movie franchise is being offered for sale by RK Motors in Charlotte, complete with a thumping American V-8 underhood. Wait, wasn’t the Stang in Fast Furious: Tokyo Drift driven by a Nissan GT-R RB26? You’re right, it was—at least one of them, anyway. Apparently, three of the muscle cars were built for the film, two of which had V-8s displacing 430 cubes. Details are fuzzy, as they often are with Hollywood movies, but there may have been as many as six Mustangs on set at one point or another. This unit at RK is listed as having a 347-cubic-inch mill under its king-sized hood and being a gen-u-wine member of the cast. Billed as a restomod, the Mustang also has a Tremec TKO600 five-speed manual backing up the Roush crate engine. Original(-to-the-movie) 19-inch Volk Racing wheels bring a dose of screen-correct accuracy, and the rear end is a Moser 8.8 with a limited-slip diff and 3.73 gears. According to the seller, that Nissan-powered Mustang we all saw in the film was only used for stills and close-up shots, with the drifting duties left to the other V-8 Mustangs on set—of which this car is one. While it may not have the same engine used during its filming sequences, the car does have a heckuva story, one for which certain collectors will happily
Origin: Mustang from ‘Tokyo Drift’ for sale, but without Nissan RB26 engine