11/15/2005 10:38:22 PM
11/15/2005 11:00:59 PM
yeah that is a pretty big burn to those people that were talking shit to you in that thread
11/15/2005 11:02:20 PM
^yes, i believe it is
11/15/2005 11:03:56 PM
DON'T WRECK THAT TRUCK!
11/15/2005 11:12:12 PM
another "who cares" thread. hippies
11/15/2005 11:47:05 PM
i'm sure you like your food cheaper.
11/15/2005 11:49:04 PM
^^i'd say the people saving $700 a month PER TRUCK care^^^uhm, i fail to see the similarity"These 18-wheelers make hydrogen as they go"[Edited on November 15, 2005 at 11:49 PM. Reason : `]
11/15/2005 11:49:06 PM
he just joking i thought -- theres no real danger
11/15/2005 11:56:21 PM
$700 per month is hardly pittance. This doesn't sound economical for passanger vehicles, but I can see it being very effective with trucks if it really saves that much money.
11/15/2005 11:56:28 PM
i'm not up to speed on my tractor trailor diesel fuel efficency? what kind of percentage reduction are we talking about when we say $700/mth
11/16/2005 12:05:50 AM
I didn't say I could read
11/16/2005 12:08:19 AM
11/16/2005 12:14:35 AM
damn, with a ROI of no more than 2 years thats a pretty sweet investment for truck companies.
11/16/2005 12:25:20 AM
wierd judgement call to move this to the garagebut i understand it
11/16/2005 12:26:28 AM
11/16/2005 12:39:05 AM
ahhaahhh your only defense is to put words in my mouth. i claimed that water could be used to power cars by extracting hydrogen from it, and behold, i am proven correct.its sad then when its printed plainly that hydrogen from water can power automobiles, all you can do is try and twist yourself into a incomprehensible linguistic pretzel. anyone that can read or think knows that there is the potential to power cars from hydrogen extracted from water [Edited on November 16, 2005 at 1:06 AM. Reason : -]
11/16/2005 12:59:25 AM
Except these trucks are not running 100% on hydrogen like you were saying in the other thread.
11/16/2005 9:11:07 AM
10% is nothing to scoff at.
11/16/2005 9:47:07 AM
I could have sworn this thread was going to be about using hydrogen to weigh less when going over the scales.
11/16/2005 9:55:10 AM
For cars:http://www.greencarcongress.com/2005/11/hydrogenenhance.html
11/16/2005 10:10:26 AM
11/16/2005 1:27:05 PM
11/16/2005 2:59:18 PM
see, Josh, I think what the point here is, is that you get less energy out of burning hydrogen than you put into electrolytically extracting it... so you can never power a car with water, except maybe with a freaky sort of catalyst that doesen't exist as of yet. This is closer to a car producing its own supply of nitrous oxide, than running a car off of hydrogen... it improves the efficiency and power output of the primary fuel, but could not operate without the primary fuel...
11/16/2005 3:20:03 PM
Why does everyone think hydrogen is the Holy Grail. It takes electricity to produce it which has to come from somewhere (fossil fuels).
11/18/2005 8:27:45 PM
it takes electricity to get gas from oil
11/18/2005 8:34:19 PM
you can create energy by sun, wind, sea, running water, nuclear and geothermal ways. We need a power company that make normal buildings with roof top solar cells to make energy. It may not be a lot, but if you put it on top of every house, every building, it adds up. And reduce coal usage as a source of power (70% or so of US power is from coal, believe it or not).I agree, hydorgen isn't the holy grail for energy needs, but its just another viable way of it becoming the next usable energy source. The holy grail will be and still is fusion. Once we figure it out and harness the power of the sun, energy will become a lot more plentiful of where we can make hydrogen fuel cells cheapier, be a lot more clean and make it more efficient.
11/18/2005 9:05:37 PM
11/18/2005 9:13:26 PM
11/18/2005 9:34:05 PM
hydroelectric power isnt exactly suited to vehicle propulsion
11/18/2005 9:39:47 PM
haha, sure it is if you can get over the fact that every car will have a nuclear reactor.
11/18/2005 9:43:24 PM
11/18/2005 10:19:36 PM
hydroelectric vehicle propulsion
11/20/2005 1:06:47 AM
hhaaharealistically will the hydrogen truckers add be enough to counteract the high levels of methane they expel?
11/20/2005 1:45:18 PM