A simple software method to increase the duty-cycle resolution in a digital pulse width modulation (DPWM)-controlled power ...
Rad Power Bikes, a Seattle staple in e-bikes, faces Chapter 11 bankruptcy after 18 years, struggling under $73 million in ...
Seattle-based Rad Power Bikes, a pioneer in mass-market e-bikes, filed for bankruptcy protection earlier this week as it continues to look for a buyer amid falling sales and massive debt. Court ...
It’s a stunning fall for the once leading e-bike brand in the US. It’s a stunning fall for the once leading e-bike brand in the US. is transportation editor with 10+ years of experience who covers EVs ...
GeekWire chronicles the Pacific Northwest startup scene. Sign up for our weekly startup newsletter, and check out the GeekWire funding tracker and VC directory. by Kurt Schlosser on Dec 17, 2025 at ...
WBEZ-FM 91.5 was back on the air live and local Thursday morning after nearly a day without power forced the station to vacate its Navy Pier studios and run network programming. ComEd replaced a ...
Listeners to WBEZ-FM 91.5 may have noticed an abrupt change in the programming schedule Wednesday morning after a power outage shut down operations at the Chicago public radio station’s Navy Pier ...
Beeping from a smoke alarm abruptly woke Matt Privratsky. Down in the dining room, he found a single e-bike battery on a metal shelf, smoldering in an orange glow. It looked like magma, and the flames ...
The U.S. CPSC warns users to immediately stop using Rad Power Bikes’ lithium-ion e-bike batteries and dispose of them through approved hazardous-waste channels. The U.S. Consumer Product Safety ...
Federal safety regulators are warning owners of Rad Power Bikes to stop using certain lithium-ion batteries immediately after reports of explosions. The new information may shed light on the company’s ...
The Consumer Product Safety Commission is issuing an urgent safety warning for Rad Power Bikes owners after at least 31 fires and 12 instances of property damage totaling more than $734,000 were ...