I had an opportunity to drive GM's Hydrogen Fuel Cell Chevy Equinox through their "Project Driveway". I thought I would give my impressions here. Mind you, I'm not a gear head; if anything, I'm more familiar with the manufacturing process for vehicles than cars themselves. However, I thought that this forum might find it interesting.
3/7/2009 1:31:21 PM
I should also add that they've made great strives in terms of range. They're right now at about 200 miles per fueling, but from talking with them, it seems they are pretty close to expanding that range by a significant amount. The engine we saw was a fourth generation design, but they're planning to use an even smaller and more efficient fifth generation design for production three years down the road.
3/7/2009 1:38:06 PM
What was wrong with electric cars again?
3/8/2009 11:58:38 AM
$texas
3/8/2009 2:18:32 PM
too bad GM is a day late and billions of dollars short. Even if GM were to bring this vehicle to market tomorrow, I really don't see hydrogen production/infrastructure taking off in time it to do any good regarding GM's current financial position. They didn't skip the hybrid, i've been reading about the volt for close to 5 years. They also have a hybrid malibu, tahoe, and silverado.
3/8/2009 4:18:33 PM
and escalade
3/8/2009 4:20:06 PM
wordsGM is trading at $1.45
3/8/2009 9:43:28 PM
3/8/2009 11:42:43 PM
I have worked with the NCSU EcoCAR project, which is going to be using the same basic electric motor from the Equinox. The battery technology just isn't there. You need huge stacks of those things to get 150-200 miles on a car with any weight.
3/9/2009 5:22:22 PM
the Honda Hydrogen Fuel Cell car's range is around 270+ per fill up and looks pretty sweet.
3/9/2009 5:26:26 PM
Thanks for posting this RedGuard.This really is THE saving hope for GM. Hydrogen infrastructure really isn't terribly expensive to make these vehicles viable for the money makers: Enterprise and Government fleet.It's also a LOT more long-term beneficial than battery-electric vehicles, in both upkeep and production costs. Not to mention hundreds of times more environmentally friendly.While I have almost zero confidence that GM will survive long enough to see these vehicles hit production, I do think whoever buys them, or whatever they end up as after Chapter11 will get this technology to market with a quickness.
3/9/2009 7:19:37 PM
3/9/2009 8:05:38 PM
saving hope? you do realize that these alternative type of cars will have relatively little bearing on the bottom line for any automaker, at least for the next 5-10 years? I know Toyota is having a lot of problems now as well, but it got to where it is because of its regular old boring cars, not different stuff like the Prius.
3/9/2009 8:20:01 PM
it was my understanding that producing fuel-ready hydrogen cost more energy (and pollution) than it saved by running on hydrogeni have nothing to back this up, and i've yet to google it, though
3/10/2009 11:44:03 AM
MAYBE YOU SHOULD GOOGLE IT BEFORE TALKING OUT OF YOUR ASS, SONRAW RAWR RAWR KING DOUCHEBAG HERE..[Edited on March 10, 2009 at 12:38 PM. Reason : obligatory "son"]
3/10/2009 12:35:37 PM
3/10/2009 3:53:37 PM