Originally posted by DealorNoDeal
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Update on JCB's pursuit of Hydrogen as their fuel of the future
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Lack of hydrogen filling stations would be a goo limitation. That said, my motorhome has a refillable LPG tank and that is fairly similar in terms of storage and handlingBlog? What blog...?
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Maybe houses will be limited to one charging outletOriginally posted by northernladuk View Post
That's one car. Sometime in the not so distant future there will be 3 or 4 outside a house.
That is an edge case. One coming idea is that for atypical journeys you would rent a vehicle suited to that task. I don't daily drive (or own) a van because twice a year I need to buy things that I can't fit in the car.Originally posted by Zigenare View Post
Ok, you've an interview 175 miles from home, the interview lasts for an hour and you have to drive 175 miles home. Which car would you drive?
There's no emissions burning hydrogen either, technicallyOriginally posted by malvolio View Post
A fuel cell is a catalysed reaction between hydrogen and oxygen (from the air) resulting in electricity and water. No burning required. No emissions created. A point that seems to be totally lost in the argument...
Originally posted by MaryPoppinsI'd still not breastfeed a naziOriginally posted by vetranUrine is quite nourishingComment
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There is, but it's very low level from burning stuff in the air taken into the engine, and probably negligible in the real world.Originally posted by d000hg View PostThere's no emissions burning hydrogen either, technically
Blog? What blog...?
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Did you miss the part in the original post where the "lean" burn keeps the temperature below the threshold where emissions are created? Thus the only output from the process is dry steam.Originally posted by malvolio View Post
There is, but it's very low level from burning stuff in the air taken into the engine, and probably negligible in the real world.Comment
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As in crud in the air? Or non-O2 gaseous components getting involved in the reaction (nitrides/nitrates, etc?)Originally posted by malvolio View Post
There is, but it's very low level from burning stuff in the air taken into the engine, and probably negligible in the real world.Originally posted by MaryPoppinsI'd still not breastfeed a naziOriginally posted by vetranUrine is quite nourishingComment
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Only in terms that they are both a gas, hydrogens low weight and density are problematic. When a flight line tech we were constantly topping up the emergency O2 bottles and that's 8 times the size of hydrogen.Originally posted by malvolio View Post
Lack of hydrogen filling stations would be a goo limitation. That said, my motorhome has a refillable LPG tank and that is fairly similar in terms of storage and handling
Gases - Densities (engineeringtoolbox.com)But I discovered nothing else but depraved, excessive superstition. Pliny the youngerComment
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I did say similar. Temperatures are a lot different as well for example.Originally posted by Gibbon View Post
Only in terms that they are both a gas, hydrogens low weight and density are problematic. When a flight line tech we were constantly topping up the emergency O2 bottles and that's 8 times the size of hydrogen.
Gases - Densities (engineeringtoolbox.com)
Another key factor is you can make H2 fairly simply, given clean water and electricity, compared to the fairly robust industrial production and other hardware needed to get LPG to a point where you can use it.Blog? What blog...?
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