Originally posted by Eliminator
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what happens to our E30's if we run out of oil?
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Originally posted by CarsSuck View Posti think its over 250 years in the united states alone. coal is good to go.sigpic
:roll:
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Originally posted by golde30 View PostMMmMMmMm....french fry exhaust FTW!!:roll:
And then, I can still power the flux capacitor with Mr. Fusion.
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Originally posted by Eliminator View PostAh, yes. The old Brown's gas scam. Do a google search, this has been covered time and time again over the past couple of decades. IT is not a viable technology and never will be. It's about as feasible as turning lead into gold.
Originally posted by track6 View PostI'm not suggesting that a car can run completely on water. I'm suggesting that as a hybrid concept, it could significantly improve fuel economy. And the more people that pursue the concept, the sooner it will become commonplace.
Originally posted by BigD View PostThe only roadblock is replacing the network of gasoline stations with hydrogen and putting gas companies out of business. The only way this will happen is when oil becomes too expensive to be reasonable. BMW has been working on this for decades and in the 90's showed it's hydrogen E38 fleet. Now they're releasing a dual power car so you can run it on hydrogen if you find some but otherwise you can run it on gas. This is a clever way to ease people to switch.
Just hydrogen on demand. As a supplement. As a means to motivate the auto manufacturers to get fuel efficient. The CAFE standards have been a cripple to the industry, not a help.
And as gas prices have risen lately, you've seen "engineering breakthroughs" from the car companies. Chevy is touting new "direct injection" that will improve economy by 15%. Uh, isn't that what diesels have done since the 70s? It's not an accident that suddenly Toyota has, what, 5 cars capable of 40+ mpg. Only one a hybrid?
I just don't buy it. Cars today are safer, cleaner, better built, and more dependable then they ever were before. But fuel economy is the same for decades.Adrenaline. Speed. LEGAL!
You built that car to perform, now learn to drive.
Get On Track. You won't be sorry.
SVTOA Performance driving instructor.
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Originally posted by track6 View PostYeah, but that's the sell with "on board" generators. NO fueling stations, no dangerous tank on board, no infrastructure changes.
Just hydrogen on demand. As a supplement. As a means to motivate the auto manufacturers to get fuel efficient. The CAFE standards have been a cripple to the industry, not a help.
And as gas prices have risen lately, you've seen "engineering breakthroughs" from the car companies. Chevy is touting new "direct injection" that will improve economy by 15%. Uh, isn't that what diesels have done since the 70s? It's not an accident that suddenly Toyota has, what, 5 cars capable of 40+ mpg. Only one a hybrid?
I just don't buy it. Cars today are safer, cleaner, better built, and more dependable then they ever were before. But fuel economy is the same for decades.
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Originally posted by BigD View PostWhy do you need any diesel or gasoline? We have nuclear power, natural water force power and solar. All readily convertible to electricity, and in turn, hydrogen. I already quoted you what it would cost here using the electricity prices directly from BC Hydro, 3 CENTS per kilo of hydrogen.
Originally posted by BigD View PostWell that part IS a scam. You aren't going to get the facilities necessary to extract hydrogen from water into a car, let alone the energy required for the process (where is that going to come from?).
Originally posted by BigD View PostYou drive around on a big ass bomb yourself. You've just never thought about the danger, everyone does it so it feels safe. But all it takes is for you to hit something, puncture a fuel line or the tank itself and if the tank isn't full, you're going to blow sky high. Now that HAS happened and will continue to.Last edited by Eliminator; 10-12-2006, 05:33 PM.
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Originally posted by track6 View PostI've read lots of articles for and against this technology. One site says it's a scam, the next says it's the greatest thing since the wheel. Are the true scammers just trying to stop development? I'm not educated enough in chemistry to argue one side or the other.
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Originally posted by BigD View PostBut all it takes is for you to hit something, puncture a fuel line or the tank itself and if the tank isn't full, you're going to blow sky high. Now that HAS happened and will continue to.
Even if a propane tank WAS punctured, the flame is outside, not inside the tank, and there would be waaaay too much escaping fuel for the fire to get inside the tank.
Relate this to your natural gas stove at home.
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Another interesting point about the past and fuel economy... The cars of today are acheiving the same economy, yes. Except that it is now a midsize sedan capable of 40mpg, not a honda 1300cc cVcc.Joe Funk -- Portland Oregon
That Guy.
03 X5. 3 liter obviously.
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Originally posted by Eliminator View PostYou don't. That means that it costs 1.12 to 3.20 to product an amount of hydrogen with an energy value equivalent to a gallon of gasoline. This study was done by Stanford Univerisity, check it out.
Originally posted by Eliminator View PostCorrect. Also, you can't get any more energy out of it than you put into it. If you put "x" amount of energy into making hydrogen, you'll get (at most) "x" back when you burn it. Of course you could use waste energy from braking to generate electricity to make hydrogen. But why bother? Why not just store electricity in a battery? Much simpler and cheaper.
The only problem with hydrogen is that it is not readily available in raw form. But guess what? Neither is gasoline!!! Do you think it comes from a gasoline tree somewhere? Do you have any idea how much energy it takes to find, pump and refine oil into gas? The only reason it's so cheap for us is mass production. If we were to setup water refineries with the same kind of investment effort, it would cost them, as I already said twice, 3 cents per kilo to produce (from water, not from wind). And since the raw material is the main product of combustion, we'll never have a raw material shortage.
Originally posted by Eliminator View PostGasoline EXPLOSIONS are rare to non-existant. Liquid gasoline from a leak will burn, but not explode. To have an explosion, gasoline needs to be vaporized at a precise ratio with oxygen. Odds of that happening on a large enough scale to cause an explosion are virtually zero.
Originally posted by FunkmastaWith propane it would be more of a flash than an explosion. Remember, for an explosion there has to be some sort of pressured chamber. Otherwise the flame and heat will just expand into the atmosphere.
Even if a propane tank WAS punctured, the flame is outside, not inside the tank, and there would be waaaay too much escaping fuel for the fire to get inside the tank.
Relate this to your natural gas stove at home.
No a punctured propane tank won't explode. But the trunk and interior, after it fills with propane, will, after the cabbie steps on the brakes and turns on the bulbs.
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Originally posted by BigD View PostYou said using the fuels. I just told you how much it costs using the electricity our powerplants already generate.
Originally posted by BigD View PostI think I see your source of confusion. You think that hydrogen proponents are trying to invent some sort of perpetual motion machine.
Originally posted by BigD View PostThe only problem with hydrogen is that it is not readily available in raw form. But guess what? Neither is gasoline!!! Do you think it comes from a gasoline tree somewhere? Do you have any idea how much energy it takes to find, pump and refine oil into gas? The only reason it's so cheap for us is mass production. If we were to setup water refineries with the same kind of investment effort, it would cost them, as I already said twice, 3 cents per kilo to produce (from water, not from wind). And since the raw material is the main product of combustion, we'll never have a raw material shortage.
your claim of .03 per kilo must be for just the electricity, and not overhead costs (equipment, land, labor, etc..)
http://nrelpubs.nrel.gov/Webtop/ws/n...FDescend%27%29
Check out document #4:
Levene, J. I.; Mann, M. K.; Margolis, R.; Milbrandt, A. (2005). Analysis of Hydrogen Production from Renewable Electricity Sources: Preprint. 9 pp.; NREL Report No. CP-560-37612.
Check out page 4 of the report (page 6 of the pdf). These are projected production costs. Guess what? At current electricity prices we're looking at $3-4 per kilo, same number that the people at STANFORD UNIVERSITY came up with.
Originally posted by BigD View PostThat's why I said non-full tanks. Those explode very nicely and I saw it happen once in Russia. No need for a precise ratio, just need enough. I think there's enough in the atmosphere.
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