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When it comes to folding bicycles, there’s one name in the game that deserves more credit than any other for putting these compact transportation machines on the map. Dahon has been behind some of the biggest innovations that have turned folding bicycles from quirky newcomers to mainstays of urban transportation. The company has offices in the US, Europe, and China. And it was the third I went to see, hopping a ride to Shenzhen to meet the company – and its maker – face to face.

Folding bikes are considered an integral part of city cycling these days. Believe it or not, the best-selling electric bikes in the US are folders. But that wasn’t always the case. It took someone with unconventional thinking to rewrite what the world considered a proper bicycle.

Aerospace physicist Dr. David Hon founded the company in 1982 (and put the “Da” and “Hon” in Dahon). As a lifelong cyclist, he was frustrated at how bulky bicycles were. Their size made for a good ride but complicated the ability to transport or store them in a home or office.

So he went back to the drawing board, working on ways to fold bicycles to be more compact in size yet still offer a sufficiently robust and comfortable frame for proper riding. The goal was to make bicycles fit better into an urban dweller’s life without sacrificing ride quality.

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The first commercial Dahon bike hit the market two years later in 1984, setting new standards for folding bicycles. There were other folding bikes around, but models from companies like Brompton, Raleigh, and Bickerton were niche and expensive, not to mention suffering from frame rigidity issues that often plagued folding designs. Dahon focused instead on targeting mass market appeal with something that was both affordable and durable.

Over the next few decades, Dahon became the world’s largest manufacturer of folding bicycles, at times claiming over 60% of the global market. They expanded production to multiple factories, introduced a wide range of models for different riding styles and budgets, and licensed some of their technology to other brands. Their designs influenced the entire folding bike industry – pushing competitors to improve folding speed, weight, and ride quality – and helped popularize the idea that folding bikes could be not just a quirky niche, but a serious transportation tool.

As electric bicycles grew in popularity over the past decade, Dahon began developing folding e-bikes, but with its own signature flair. That meant a growing number of lightweight, compact electric bikes that bucked the industry trend towards heavy, high-power models. And as much as I enjoy a relaxing pedal, those new folding e-bikes were what I was most interested in seeing on my tour of Dahon’s design headquarters. And I was not disappointed!

The offices house many of Dahon’s teams, from the designers to the marketing team and more. The walls are lined with all of the components used on different models produced by the company, which doubles as cool wall art and a real-world reference so that designers can walk over and touch the very parts they use to build bikes.

Just off the main office area is the showroom, which is packed with what looks like over a hundred different bikes. Many of them reminded me of traditional Dahon styles I’ve seen before, but just as many were shocking new styles I never knew existed, like full-size road bikes that still fold into compact packages, folding mountain bikes and even carbon fiber folding commuter bikes. I was especially surprised to see a folding e-tricycle with a giant wooden cargo box up front!

One of the first new electric models I was able to get an up-close look at was the new Dahon K Feather, an electric bike that weighs a mere 12 kg (26.4 pounds). For an electric bicycle, that’s very much a featherweight! In fact, later in the day when we took the bikes outside, a gust of wind literally blew it over while I was getting ready to ride.

This was just before the public release and so I was getting an early look at an e-bike I didn’t think could have even existed. For comparison, the lightest folding e-bikes I’ve been used to riding are nearly twice as heavy as this.

Of course, the K Feather doesn’t exactly have a massive power rating, but it’s plenty sufficient for an average city commute where the rider simply wants to get some assistance so they don’t arrive at work sweating. Once they get there, the bike folds up into something small enough to easily carry up the stairs and hide away under a desk.

Next up was the E Hemingway, another folding electric bike that I didn’t think could exist. This is basically an electric folding gravel bike, something that can handle being loaded down by big cargo panniers and take on traditional gravel biking or bikepacking, yet is still so small and compact when folded down. It even has mounting points all along the frame and fork to add more accessories, such as fork racks and frame-mounted attachments, offering even more possibilities.

But what really blew my mind was the new electric cargo trike from Dahon, known as the Cargoe T8. It has a number of impressive features. First of all, it’s a tadpole trike, meaning the two wheels are in the front instead of the more traditional two wheels in the back design. That makes it much more stable feeling as you ride it.

Next, it’s a front loader, as evidenced by that olympic-sized swimming pool of a wooden box in the front. Not only does it look beautiful, but it’s actually huge. I took it for a test ride with two adults sitting in the front cargo box and the bike felt like it was being ridden empty. More on the test rides in a moment though.

It’s also got an impressive powertrain, with a 48V 20Ah battery (960 Wh) powering a mid-drive motor that gets matched with a Shimano 8-speed internally geared rear hub. Then there are hydraulic brakes on top of that to give powerful stopping force – which is exactly what you want on a cargo trike rated to carry 190 kg (420 lb).

And of course, the cherry on top is that it’s got a folding design (of course, it’s a Dahon after all). There’s even a cute little “fourth wheel” caster that drops down below the motor mount so that you can push the folded trike more easily, such as if you needed to wiggle it around a garage or into an apartment building’s elevator. It truly is one of the best-designed tadpole cargo e-trikes I’ve ever seen, and I’ve seen a LOT of trikes.

Test riding

After touring the Dahon headquarters and meeting the team, the friendly folks at Dahon prepared a number of their new e-bike models outside for me to test ride. And as you can imagine, riding is the best part!

I started on the E-Hemingway, and despite not having any true gravel to test it on, the urban riding loops I did were still an excellent test for the bike’s feel. I was surprised by how nicely stiff it felt, especially considering folding bikes are notoriously flexy in their frames due to the long, spindly nature of the stems and tubes.

I was also unsure how it would feel with all of the bags mounted on either side of the front and rear wheels, but it didn’t offer me any issues. If anything, it was weird how much of a non-issue it was. The mounting points were obviously well thought out, and the fork mounts keep the weight close to the axis of rotation, further reducing any strange feeling from excess weight on the fork.

Next was an even lighter feeling bike, the K-Feather. At just 12 kg (26 lb), this is definitely a featherweight in the e-bike world, folding or otherwise. And while the bike’s 16″ wheels do make it feel smaller when you ride it, the bike still feels good in the handling department. It takes some getting used to, but it was very confidence-inspiring.

I just kept thinking what a perfect e-bike this would make for my mother-in-law, who needs to carry an e-bike up the stairs to her second-floor walkup apartment, and so she needs something as light as possible that can still take her to the train station she uses to get to work. Plus, the fact that it folds up so small makes it even easier to stow on the train. She’s a great example of just how many people could use a tiny, lightweight e-bike for a last-mile (or more!) type of ride.

To be honest, I’m rarely ever on folding e-bikes this small, and yet it still felt quite natural to me after the few seconds of “Whoa, those are little wheels!” feeling when you first get on.

The most interesting of all my test rides though was definitely the Cargoe T8, which was even more impressive than I expected. First of all, I didn’t just want to test it empty, so two of Dahon’s team members kindly obliged me by going for a ride together. They hopped in the front box together and we were off, like a father and two adult children. The bike pedals nicely, and the rear internally-geared hub is a key piece of kit to ensure you can downshift when you inevitably forget to before coming to a stop. Getting this thing rolling from top gear, even with that mid-drive motor, would be difficult if you forgot to downshift with a regular derailleur. That’s one of many reasons I love those internally-geared hubs.

The rear rack battery isn’t the most elegant-looking solution, and I wonder if it could have somehow been built into the wooden cargo box, though that would have made battery removal more difficult and robbed some of the cargo capacity. So instead, it makes sense to keep it easily accessible on the rack, especially since most people will be charging this e-trike by bringing the battery to the outlet and not by bringing the entire bike inside.

The clever folding option may not get used by everyone, but if someone did want to bring it inside, this would be the way to do it. It also allows you to more easily fit the bike in the back of a large SUV or pickup truck bed without needing to leave the tailgate open. It’s a niche feature, but if you ever need it, you’ll be glad to have it.

I was also surprised to see that the front end actually steers. This isn’t like those big cargo e-trikes where the bike just has a central articulation, which means you’re effectively rear-wheel steering by bending the rear of the bike around. The handlebars actually have linkage up to the front and steer a front axle, to which the cargo box is mounted. It turns so far that you can do tight donuts, even in a big cargo trike! It’s another thing that will likely take a bit of getting used to, but in the few minutes of city block maneuvering I did with the trike, I felt comfortable enough to risk my two riding companions in the front box!

Final thoughts

As my day at Dahon’s Shenzhen headquarters wrapped up, I couldn’t help but reflect on how far the company – and folding bikes as a whole – have come. What started as Dr. David Hon’s garage project has grown into a global force, one that helped shape the very idea of what a bicycle could be. Standing in that showroom surrounded by decades of design evolution, from simple steel commuters to featherweight electric gravel machines and full-blown folding cargo trikes, it was clear that the same spirit of experimentation still runs deep here.

Dahon’s influence is found in more than just the bikes they sell – it’s also felt in the market they helped create. The fact that folding bikes (and especially folding e-bikes) are now among the best-selling two-wheelers in the US owes a huge debt to their early persistence in making the concept practical, affordable, and appealing to everyday riders. Even now, in a market crowded with newcomers, Dahon continues to push into niches most companies wouldn’t think to touch, from featherweight e-commuters to apartment-friendly cargo trike heavy-haulers.

Rolling away from Dahon’s Shenzhen HQ, I felt like I’d just stepped out of a living history book for folding bikes – except this one still has blank pages waiting to be filled. These folks aren’t just cranking out bikes; they’re still experimenting, still asking “what if?” in ways that keep the whole folding bike category fresh.

Sure, the K Feather and E Hemingway wowed me, but that Cargoe T8? That thing was the mic drop. If there’s a better example of Dahon’s “folding without limits” mentality, I haven’t seen it.

So yeah, you can say I left impressed – not just by the bikes, but by the sense that after 40+ years, Dahon still has more tricks up its sleeve. And if the next few decades are anything like the last, I can’t wait to see what unfolds next.

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Toyota’s new bZ SUV starts at under $35,000 and it’s bringing some serious upgrades

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Toyota's new bZ SUV starts at under ,000 and it's bringing some serious upgrades

Toyota’s new electric SUV boasts significantly more range, a revamped interior and exterior, and an NACS port, allowing you to recharge at Tesla Superchargers. Despite the upgrades, the 2026 Toyota bZ now starts at under $35,000.

2026 Toyota bZ electric SUV prices and range by trim

The bZ4X, Toyota’s first electric SUV, has been killed off and replaced with the upgraded bZ. Toyota improved it in almost every way possible for the 2026 model year, adding driving range, more features, a fresh new look, and more.

Even with the upgrades, the new and improved Toyota bZ is cheaper than the outgoing bZ4X. Toyota revealed prices for the 2026 bZ electric SUV will start at $34,900, or $2,170 less than the outgoing model.

That’s for the base XLE FWD trim with a 57.7 kWh battery, good for 236 miles range. Upgrading to the extended-range bZ XLE FWD Plus will cost $37,900, but a larger 74.7 kWh battery provides up to 314 miles of driving range, representing a 25% improvement over the 2025 model year.

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Toyota-bZ-SUV-prices
2026 Toyota bZ electric SUV (Source: Toyota)

For AWD, prices start at $39,900. Thanks to new SIC semiconductors, AWD models now pack up to 388 hp, 50% more than the outgoing electric SUV.

The range-topping 2026 Toyota bZ Limited FWD trim starts at $43,300, while upgrading to AWD will cost you an extra $2,000.

2026 Toyota bZ trim Battery Range Starting Price*
XLE FWD 57.7 kWh 236 miles $34,900
XLE FWD Plus 74.7 kWh 314 miles $37,900
XLE AWD 74.7 kWh 288 miles $39,900
Limited FWD 74.7 kWh 299 miles $43,300
Limited AWD 74.7 kWh 278 miles $45,300
2026 Toyota bZ prices and range by trim (*excluding $1,450 DPH fee)

Toyota’s new electric SUV now features a built-in NACS port, allowing you to recharge at Tesla Superchargers. With a new thermal management system and battery preconditioning, the bZ can charge from 10% to 80% in about 30 minutes.

The new electric SUV features a fresh look both inside and out. Like the latest Camry and Crown, the bZ features Toyota’s new “hammerhead front end design” with an LED light bar across the front.

Toyota-bZ-SUV-prices
The interior of the 2026 Toyota bZ (Source: Toyota)

Inside, the 2026 bZ gets a redesigned center console and a larger 14″ Toyota Audio Multimedia touchscreen, two wireless phone chargers, and an improved dashboard.

Toyota said dropping the “4X” at the end of the name was to simplify things for buyers. The 2026 models are expected to begin arriving at dealerships in the second half of 2025, which could be any day now.

With the 2026 model year arriving soon, Toyota is offering clearance prices on the 2025 bZ4X with up to $12,000 off in lease cash. You can use our link to find Toyota bZ4X models in your area (trusted affiliate link).

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CASE eliminates “messy middle” worries with ZQUIP battery swap tech

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Amid the alliterative, anti-EV “messy middle” rhetoric and the Trump Administration EPA’s ongoing regulatory rollbacks, it’s been tough for fleet and equipment buyers with 8-12 year replacement cycles to make sense of where things are headed – but a new partnership between CASE Construction Equipment and ZQUIP could put those concerns to rest (and make a trip to the CASE dealer a no-brainer).

iVT reports that CASE Construction Equipment has formalized a new partnership with ZQUIP to deliver heavy equipment assets featuring ZQUIP’s swappable energy modules – self-contained power units that could be batteries, fuel cells, or diesel engines. The technology aims to eliminate range and regulation anxiety while maximizing a job site’s energy efficiency and meeting the complex demands of modern construction projects with unprecedented flexibility. And, crucially, at a lower cost than either a mixed BEV/ICE fleet.

“A fully integrated battery system is extremely expensive upfront,” explains Chris LaFleur, managing director of ZQUIP. “This system allows (customers) to buy essentially a bare tool, at a much lower price point.”

For the uninitiated, a “bare tool” is effectively an equipment asset like an excavator or wheel loader that arrives on a job site without a power plant. It’s not electric, it’s not diesel, it’s not natgas – it’s just the machine, with a flat “plate” more or less where you’d expect an engine to be.

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Once you’re ready to put that tool to work, a ZQUIP Energy Module gets dropped in, cordless-tool style, and it’s ready to go. That Energy Module could be a contained battery-electric powertrain, or it could be a generator, depending on the energy needs, duty cycles, or regulations (both noise and emissions) that are in play at that specific site.

And, like their hand-held Ryobi cousins, you don’t need as many ZQUIP Energy Modules as you need bare tools. In practice, that means you’re not tying up hundreds of kWh of battery capacity in idle machines.

“The customer decides how he wants to use it,” says Eric Zeiser, product portfolio manager at CNH Industrial, CASE’ parent company. “If he wants to keep his cost low in the beginning, he can buy just one energy module. He could buy the simplest module available to keep his initial purchase price down. And then, in the future, if in six months he realizes his job sites are bigger, he needs more power, he buys the second and third module as he needs to.”

What’s more, different sized equipment assets have different energy needs – and bigger equipment means bigger possibilities. So, while a CASE WX155ZQ wheeled excavator accommodates two energy modules, a CX210ZQ tracked excavator supports three. “On the three-bay CX210 you can have an LFP battery, an NMC battery and a diesel hybrid Energy Module, all together working at the same time,” says LaFleur.

More energy needs = more options


Animation provided by ZQuip, via Moog.

Batteries when it makes sense, ICE when you need it. But, even with an ICE generating the power, the machine is still electric.

“The excavators are always electric,” says Rob Bauer, engineering manager for ZQUIP. “The question is, where does the energy come from? In an optimum case, when you have a normal workday, you’re pulling all the energy out of a battery, and that’s a great day. Everything’s perfect. On the other hand, if you’re in a difficult site, or you have to work a lot of hours in a day, we give you options.”

That’s not just options for the operator, it’s options for the OEM as well.

Growing the CASE EV family


CASE CE compact EVs; via CASE.

For CASE Construction Equipment and its parent company, CNH Industrial, the ZQUIP partnership represents a strategic expansion, enabling it to grow the brand’s beyond existing compact electric offerings without sacrificing round-the-clock capability or requiring a utility-scale supply of new battery materials.

“CNH has always been a leader in sustainability, and we have a full range of compact electric vehicles, but we didn’t have a solution for heavy machinery until now,” says Egidio Galano, director of construction equipment product management for Europe at CNH Industrial.

The new partnership builds on an established relationship between the companies dating back to 2019. CASE’ 580EV electric backhoe loader, released in 2024 as the industry’s first production-ready purpose-built electric backhoe, utilizes the TerraTech platform from Moog (ZQUIP’s parent) for electric motion control and served as ZQUIP’s initial tester.

Since then, the project has continued to evolve, with the potential to grow to even bigger, more capable heavy machinery offerings. No word yet on pricing.

SOURCES | IMAGES: ZQUIP, via iVT.


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Your personalized solar quotes are easy to compare online and you’ll get access to unbiased Energy Advisors to help you every step of the way. Get started here

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The Hyundai IONIQ 3 is almost here, and it sounds like a real game changer

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The Hyundai IONIQ 3 is almost here, and it sounds like a real game changer

Hyundai will introduce the IONIQ 3 in less than a month. It’s expected to be more affordable than the Kona Electric, but Hyundai’s new EV will be much more advanced.

When will Hyundai launch the IONIQ 3?

We will see the IONIQ 3 for the first time at the Munich Motor Show in early September. Although Hyundai Europe’s CEO, Xavier Martinet, claims its IONIQ series is now the number two EV brand behind Tesla, this could be just the start.

Martinet told TopGear that the Inster EV and IONIQ 3 “are cheaper, so they’ll give us total coverage of the EV market.

The new EV, expected to arrive as the IONIQ 3, will sit between the Inster EV and Kona Electric in Hyundai’s lineup. According to TopGear, the IONIQ 3 will be slightly smaller than the Kona Electric, but more advanced. In the UK, the Hyundai Kona starts at £34,995 ($47,000), so prices are expected to start at about the same or even slightly less.

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Hyundai-IONIQ-3
The Hyundai Inster EV (Source: Hyundai)

Like the Kia EV3, the UK’s best-selling retail EV through the first half of the year, the Hyundai IONIQ 3 is expected to be offered with 58.3 kWh and 81.4 kWh battery pack options for a WLTP range of about 260 and 365 miles.

Instead of the 800V electrical system used in the IONIQ 5, 6, and 9 models, the IONIQ 3 will use a cheaper 400V setup.

Kia-EV3-best-selling-EV
Kia EV3 Air in Frost Blue (Source: Kia UK)

The interior will feature Hyundai’s latest software and new Pleos operating system, offering a smartphone-like user interface.

To save on costs, Hyundai will build the IONIQ 3 at its plant in Turkey. Martinet wants Hyundai to be just as big in the EV market as it is with gas and hybrid vehicles. Regarding EV sales, he explained that it “isn’t an absolute race but a race against the other manufacturers. We want the same share in all types of powertrain.”

Hyundai-IONIQ-3
Hyundai’s next-gen infotainment system powered by Pleos (Source: Hyundai)

Although adoption has been slower than some expected, Martinet still said, “people don’t go back to ICE” after owning an EV.”

Hyundai is expanding its lineup with new low-cost EVs, but still plans to continue selling gas-powered, plug-in hybrid (PHEV), and fully electric (EV) vehicles. It’s also looking to introduce extended-range electric vehicles (EREVs), which use a gas engine to power the battery.

Although the IONIQ 3 isn’t expected to arrive in the US, thanks to the new tariffs on imports, Hyundai still offers some of the most affordable EVs on the market.

After cutting prices again last month, the new 2025 Hyundai IONIQ 5 can now be leased for as low as $179 per month. It’s hard to find any monthly lease under $200, but for a $45,000 electric SUV, it’s a steal.

The Kia EV3 is already a top-selling electric vehicle in Europe and the most popular retail EV in the UK this year. Will Hyundai top it with the IONIQ 3? We’ll find out more soon. Stay tuned.

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