Greenworks is now launching its annual early Black Friday sale, discounting a collection of its popular electric tools in the process. You’ll find everything from its signature electric lawn mowers to prepare for next spring, to more relevant electric snow blowers and everything in-between. There are pages of discounts up for grabs right now over on the company’s official site, but there are some landing pages that may help with your savings journey.
These EVOLV electric scooters are on sale, too
EVOLV has launched its Black Friday sale, taking up to $200 off three of its electric scooter models, like the customer favorite Terra for $1,129 shipped. Down from its regular $1,229 price tag, today’s deal is among the lowest we have tracked for this particular model since its release last year, considering it first debuted at a slightly higher $1,245 price tag, and has received few actual discounts since. You can learn more about it by heading below the fold, or by checking out our in-depth review.
This electric scooter comes equipped with dual 600W motors and a 48V battery that propels it to top speeds of 31 MPH and travels up to 34 miles on a single charge – able to fully recharge from zero in five to seven hours. It features two driving modes, Dual mode to activate both motors together to produce 2,200W of peak power for steep inclines and max speed, and Eco mode to activate only one motor for a more controlled 15 MPH speed. It also comes with front and rear shocks, dual-drum brakes, twin LED headlights, twin LED taillights, in-deck lights, and a foldable design to make storage and transportation easier when it is not in use.
WORX 40V 24-inch cordless electric hedge trimmer now $175
Amazon is offering the WORX 40V Power Share 24-inch Cordless Electric Hedge Trimmer for $174.99 shipped. Down from its $230 price tag, this hedge trimmer has only seen two previous discounts that brought prices down in more than $5 to $10 increments. Today’s deal amounts to a 24% markdown off the going rate, coming in as the lowest price of 2023 that we have tracked. It even beats out WORX’s own website where it is still listed for its MSRP.
This electric hedge trimmer comes powered by two 20V MaxLithium-ion PowerShare batteries, and sports Worx’s longest 24-inch dual-action steel blades with a 3/4-inch cutting diameter that reaches 2,200 strokes-per-minute. The head is able to swivel up to 180 degrees for better maneuverability around hedges without the need to contort your body. Its full-wrap handle allows for better comfort and control, ensuring you can trim each hedge from the right angle.
Rad Power Black Friday deals start now
We’ve been talking about early Black Friday deals all this week, and now Rad Power is entering the chat. The company is a favorite here at Electrek for its lineup of e-bikes, and now you’ll be able to save on every single model it sells. There’s a whole collection of e-bikes that come in all kinds of shapes and sizes – with as much as $1,200 in savings to be had across the lineup,
If you’re a bit cautious about taking advantage of a discount now, ahead of all the festivities on Thanksgiving Week, Rad Power is also here to put your mind at ease with a low-price promise. Through the end of the year on December 31, the company will refund you the difference of any e-bike that ends up dropping lower later in the holiday season.
As far as what’s included, you can just check out the entire sale over at Rad Power Bikes for a rundown of which e-bikes are on sale and how much you’ll be able to save. But if you’re looking to cut to the chase, our favorites are outlined below.
The savings this week are also continuing to a collection of other markdowns. To the same tune as the offers above, these all help you take a more energy-conscious approach to your routine.
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Ocean energy storage startup Sizable Energy just raised $8 million to bring its long-duration offshore pumped hydro system to market.
The round was led by Playground Global, with backing from Exa Ventures, Verve Ventures, Satgana, EDEN/IAG, and Unruly Capital. The funding will help Sizable move from successful wave basin testing at the Maritime Research Institute Netherlands (MARIN) to full sea trials off the coast of Reggio Calabria, Italy.
Turning ocean depth into long-duration energy storage
Sizable Energy is reimagining pumped hydro storage for the sea. Instead of using freshwater and dams, the company’s system uses saturated sea-salt brine – about 20% denser than seawater – that moves between a floating reservoir and a deep-water reservoir. By harnessing gravity and ocean depth, it can store and release gigawatt-scale power without the land use or environmental impact of onshore hydro projects. Here’s a video explaining how it works:
CEO and co-founder Dr. Manuele Aufiero says the tech could help stabilize the grid as renewables surge: “Without cost-effective long-duration storage, the grid cannot keep up, regardless of energy source. Our ocean-based system stores gigawatt-scale power affordably, making the grid more stable, resilient, and ready for the future.”
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The company claims its system offers the lowest Levelized Cost of Storage (LCOS) among long-duration storage technologies, even under optimistic lithium-ion cost projections. It combines readily available materials that can be made, assembled, and installed at depths of 500 meters or more, using existing maritime infrastructure.
Playground Global general partner Bruce Leak called ocean depth “a practically unlimited resource,” adding, “Sizable Energy is leveraging it to deliver long-duration energy storage at a fraction of the cost of batteries.”
What’s next
After proving its concept in the lab and at MARIN, where it functioned successfully in harsh ocean environments, Sizable Energy is now testing a new prototype in the Mediterranean. The pilot near Reggio Calabria, Italy, will validate its floating system, assembly, and deployment process, and pave the way for a multi-megawatt demonstration plant in the Mediterranean Sea.
If all goes to plan, the company expects to begin commercial project development in 2026 at multiple global sites, working with governments, energy providers, and local manufacturers to bring long-duration ocean energy storage to scale.
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Three months after declaring an unofficial world record achievement in power density for an electric motor, YASA’s latest axial flux prototype has shattered that previous benchmark. The axial flux motor specialist is touting another unofficial world record, achieved with an even lighter design.
If you haven’t heard of YASA, we recommend checking out this unique company, which is doing some extraordinary things with electric motors. Over the past 16 years, YASA has evolved in tandem with its technology, revisiting and refining traditional designs dating back to the 1820s by optimizing them with modern components and materials. The result is the axial flux motor – a genuinely viable alternative to conventional radial motors used in most EVs today.
YASA motors have been integrated in production vehicles like the Koenigsegg Regera and the Ferrari Stradale SF90 hybrid. In 2023, we saw the first implementation of YASA’s axial flux motors in a Mercedes vehiclee, the Vision One Eleven concept, after the German automaker acquired the company in 2021.
By late 2024, we saw Mercedes’ first integration of YASA’s axial flux motors into its AMG.EA architecture featuring 800V capabilities and support for dual and tri-motor systems. At the time, YASA said each of its axial flux motors offers four times more torque and double the power of nearly all current tech on the market.
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Over the summer, YASA proved the tremendous power of its axial flux motor during real-world trials, achieving an unofficial world record in power density. Now, just a few months later, YASA is touting a lighter motor that delivers significantly more power, declaring yet another unofficial world record.
YASA’s latest axial flux prototype / Source: YASA
YASA’s axial flux motors could be a game-changer
To understand the latest milestone recently achieved by YASA, you need to look at the data from its last record-setting trial, which included a 13.1 kg axial flux prototype. As we reported in July, that version was able to achieve a peak rating of 550 kW (738 hp), equating to a power density of 42 kW/kg.
An unofficial world record.
Most recently, however, YASA has been testing a lighter axial flux motor prototype, weighing in at 12.7kg, on a more powerful dynamometer. The latest trials delivered a 750 kW (1000+ hp) short-term peak rating, resulting in a power density of 59 kW/kg – a 40% increase from initial testing and another unofficial world record.
According to YASA CEO Joerg Miska, that’s also triple the performance density of the top radial flux motors currently available in the industry.
Peak power aside, YASA’s latest axial flux motor has the makings of something truly special. The company reported that it estimates the continuous power of its latest prototype to be “in the region of 350kW-400kW (469 hp-536 hp).”
That’s quite impressive when you consider the limited weight and size of such an electric motor and even more exciting when you think of the possibility of four of them (or even two) powering future EVs. YASA founder and CTO Tim Woolmer spoke to the achievement:
On behalf of the entire YASA team, I’m proud and excited to so quickly follow up on the already remarkable results of our initial testing with this incredible result. To achieve a 750 kW short-term peak rating and a density of 59 kW/kg is a major validation of our next-generation axial flux technology. It’s proof of what focused engineering innovation can achieve. And this isn’t a concept on a screen — it’s running, right now, on the dynos. We’ve built an electric motor that’s significantly more power-dense than anything before it – all with scalable materials and processes. This motor will bring game-changing technology to the high-performance automotive sector.
While these prototypes still have a way to go before reaching scaled production, this latest achievement offers real-life evidence that the technology works and could change the way OEMs approach powertrain design. YASA’s Chief of New Technology, Simon Odling, said it best:
The early results are extremely encouraging. The motor’s performance on the dyno has exceeded even our most optimistic simulations. As well as its incredible peak power and overall power density, we estimate this new motor will be able to deliver all-important continuous power in the region of 350kW-400kW. This is real hardware, in real life, delivering real data – and it’s performing beautifully.
YASA’s team of engineers is already deep into the validation process of this latest axial flux prototype motor, promising further details of its development in the near future.
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America’s heartland is full of rural communities that are miles away from its major cities, both geographically and culturally – but that doesn’t mean these more sparsely populated regions can’t reap the benefits of electrification. In fact, EVs offer rural drivers even more benefits than they do to city-dwellers!
“An electric lifestyle would be a boon to our rural heartland,” wrote the Union of Concerned Scientists’ Maria Cecilia Pinto de Moura. “Rural communities across the country have their own distinguishing characteristics, but certain shared characteristics such as driving distances, the type of vehicles driven, and socio-economics are factors which contribute to this larger potential to benefit from vehicle electrification.”
Pinto de Moura went on to outline five ways rural and country drivers could benefit from going electric – but that was in 2021, and a whole lot has changed in the nearly five years since.
As such, I thought it was high time we revisit some of the reasons EVs could be a great fit for rural lifestyles, see if we could uncover any new ones, and outline the reasons we think rural drivers should rush to embrace electric vehicles in the coming calendar year.
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1. More miles means more savings
David Blenkle’s 252,000 mile Mustang Mach-E; via Ford.
When you hear that line about, “the average American drives 30 to 40 miles a day,” remember that in towns like Wellington, Ohio, or Colfax, Washington, 30 miles is a grocery run. Each way. So when people trot out that old line about range anxiety, what rural drivers actually hear isn’t reassurance. It’s dismissal — a suggestion that they drive too far for an EV to work, when nothing could be further from the truth.
A recent study by Rural Climate Partnership found that rural drivers spend an average of 44% more on fuel than city dwellers, and that the top 3.6% of rural drivers — the “supermilers” who rack up the most miles — could save over $4,000 each year by switching to electric fuel.
2. Electric trucks have arrived
Sierra AT4 EV towing a boat; via GM.
Country guys and gals love their pickups, and arguably the single biggest difference between the EV markets of 2021 and 2025 is the proliferation of electric trucks and SUVs ready to help haul, chore, camp, and tow.
Why not save your expensive horses from breathing in gas and diesel exhaust. Haul ’em with your quiet new EV, instead!
Unlike many apartment-dwelling urban drivers, most rural owners can charge right at home. More than 80% of rural households have a driveway or garage that are ideal for overnight Level 2 charging, and many already have a 240V outlet, keeping setup costs (if there even are any) to a minimum.
Plug in before bed, wake up to a full battery every morning, and do it for pennies on the dollar, especially with off-peak rates.
4. Lifesaving battery power
F-150 Lightning plugged in; via Ford.
If disaster strikes and you lose power, many electric trucks have the ability to power your home and appliances with the energy stored in their massive batteries – either from the truck itself, or through a V2X home battery system. If you live in an area prone to extreme weather events, the ability to keep medication refrigerated can be a literal life-saver!
As such, getting behind the wheel of an ultra-powerful, ultra smooth-running electric pickup truck from your favorite brand is easier than ever.
6. Energy independence and American jobs
GM Defense electric military vehicle; via GM.
At the risk of sounding like a paranoid red hat, rural Americans are proud Americans – just like rural Canadians are proud Canadians. Unfortunately, every gallon of gas burned in their pickups and SUVs came from oil drilled, refined, and traded on global markets — and that means supporting the oil business and economies of nations whose values don’t always align with, or maybe are even outright hostile to theirs.
Switching to an EV can help more of that money right here at home, especially as more and better battery recycling efforts come online and newer battery and anode/cathode chemistries are developed, reducing dependence on rare Earth metals, cobalt, and even lithium.
There are obviously more reasons to go electric than these, from lower cost of ownership to saving the planet to absolutely killer burnouts that would make the one-tire-fire era IROC Camaros hang their 305s in shame – but I think those kind of fade into the background as being appealing to all, instead of being especially appealing to rural drivers.
That said, it’s been a long time since I was back in Ohio, so maybe I’ve forgotten what it’s like. You guys are smart, head on down to the comments and let me know what I missed!
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