four pages...who'd have thought?
10/4/2005 6:26:53 PM
you dont need to input energy to get the hydrogen out of water when you use a catalyst. ive said it a million times. buy hey, im sure the entire physics community is wrong and you are the only one who is right.the catalyst wears out, and the water gets burned, thats why its not limitless energy.[Edited on October 4, 2005 at 6:39 PM. Reason : -]
10/4/2005 6:37:24 PM
10/4/2005 6:46:16 PM
you fucking moron. You're worse than aaronburro with your bullshit and your pseudo-science posts.This stuff does absolutely nothing to water. The hydrogen comes from this organosilane stuff, not water. from your own link:
10/4/2005 7:01:02 PM
^but since you get more energy out then you put in, its still perpetual motion. the point remains.
10/4/2005 7:18:08 PM
I've been reading most of this thread, and I'm going to have to say that aaronburro and LoneSnark win. Supposing that there is a catalyst that makes the electrolysis of water less energy-intensive, you still can't get more energy out of the hydrogen (in the form of reacting it with oxygen to form water again) than you put into it.For example, and I'm just totally making up numbers for this example, let's say that it typically takes 8000 joules to break water down into hydrogen and oxygen (that assumes perfect efficiency, though). If everything is also perfectly efficient in the reverse reaction, you can't get more than 8000 joules worth of work out of that hydrogen fuel. Now suppose you use this catalyst, and let's suppose that it reduces the energy by half, to 4000 joules. According to thermodynamics, then, you can now only get a maximum of 4000 joules worth of work out of the hydrogen. So yes, you reduced the energy necessary to form the hydrogen, but have you not also reduced the amount of energy you can extract from the fuel you create? Is it not true that you can only get as much energy out of a system as you put into it? Or does josh8315 mean to tell me that it only takes 4000 joules to generate the hydrogen gas but will potentially give off 8000 joules of work?
10/4/2005 7:32:44 PM
10/4/2005 8:10:09 PM
^You just answered your own question. The potential energy stored in the chemical bonds of the fuel/air mixture, plus the energy in the spark is the most you can get out of a car's engine.As for the organosilane thing, you still have to use energy to create the organosilane. You don't just find tetraethoxysilane (for example, I don't know which on they used) wandering around.
10/4/2005 8:48:31 PM
^right. and im saying there is energy in the chemical bonds of water that can also be accessed.
10/4/2005 9:35:56 PM
No, Fuel caught it. It is quite plausible to get hydrogen from a lifeform. But Josh, up until now you were arguing that you had a system to turn water into hydrogen for less energy than could be extracted by turning hydrogen into water. This was complete fiction. However, as Fuel noticed, this is not what is happening here. The energy source here is not the water or electricity or high temperatures but locked inside the organosilane, your catalyst is simply releasing the free-hydrogen trapped inside this molecule. No water is being separated in the process. As such, the car's fuel is NOT Water but Organosilane:
10/5/2005 1:18:07 AM
10/5/2005 1:27:51 AM
You're trying to explain thermodynamics to a retarded kid.Good luck with that.
10/5/2005 1:36:07 AM
10/5/2005 1:42:39 AM
^^ I dunno, it kinda becoming a game in its own right. I'm actually curious at times to read what Joshy has come up with this time.[Edited on October 5, 2005 at 1:44 AM. Reason : ^]
10/5/2005 1:43:44 AM
10/5/2005 2:40:53 AM
10/5/2005 3:32:11 AM
i know, but you say he is "technically right" is fallacious. He only appears "right" on the surface, if you ignore what is actually going on...
10/5/2005 9:04:46 AM
^^^ I hope I never spend so much time on someone like Joshy.
10/5/2005 9:18:08 AM
Forget about hydrogen or electric. This car runs on, well, air. It is weird but they are making it.http://www.theaircar.com/
10/5/2005 11:35:06 AM
interesting concept. I like it because it is inherently safer than a combustion based system. if your tank leaks, you don't leak fuel which will then ignite and cause lots of havoc. of course, if, your tank fails catastrophically, there is bad juju, because of the pressurized air... put a decent firewall between the tank and the driver and that should be no problem to the driver. it will, however, destroy the car still, though, there has to be some way to initially store the air, and even replenish it, which they seem to suggest is done entirely via fossil fuels. I like the idea of the steering wheel having a generator in it (i think thats what it said, tell me if I'm wrong), though I wonder how this affects power steering (don't have power until you start to steer, but you need that power to make starting to steer easier...)
10/5/2005 12:06:46 PM
In look around online the car has some interesting concepts in it. At night, you can plug it up and the internal generator "refills" the tank.Not to mention the fact that you could fill up at literally any gas station today that has an air hose for around .50I think they are having trouble in real world test though achieving the max range they claimed. The motor definitely works but range is apparently the initial issue.However unlike electric, you can refil the car in minutes not hours.
10/5/2005 12:10:48 PM
10/5/2005 12:16:39 PM
^Yes, I mean it is generating the compressed air.Every article I can find on it is over two to three years old. I think this is a cool idea with some potential. The guys behind it seem very shady though.
10/5/2005 12:20:35 PM
10/28/2005 12:58:14 PM
Get to work on better electric cars, then build a few hundred nuclear power plants. Pop up some wind turbines in the windy places, some hydroelectric plants on some rivers... of course all those things cost money.... But I like the electric car, we just need gas prices to triple so that we will ah.. put that higher on our list-o-things-to-do...
10/28/2005 2:15:35 PM
to all who have opposed me, you have lost. its over. its 100 percent over.http://www.wired.com/news/autotech/0,2554,69529,00.html
11/15/2005 11:03:17 PM
What is your point again? I forgot. You do realize that 100% of the energy being used by the truck is coming from burning diesel, right? Evidently minute quantities of hydrogen can be used as a catalyst to increase the combustion efficiency of diesel, so what? The fuel source is obvious, diesel! In your mythical system the fuel is chemically identical to the waste product, in a diesel engine it is not.
11/16/2005 1:09:41 AM
11/16/2005 2:35:17 AM
here are some good examples of aaronburro pwning himself.
11/16/2005 2:46:46 AM
in summry;
11/16/2005 3:39:46 AM
Damn you are retarded. Did you read your article?opening line:
11/16/2005 9:18:45 AM
biodieselmake it out of the HUGE amounts of waste oil used in the food service industryAmericans love french fries like blue whales love krill
11/16/2005 2:43:46 PM
11/16/2005 6:01:29 PM
^The main thing is that you USE energy to produce it, which is exactly why water is not a "fuel" per se. In order to tap into the energy contained in water, you have to use other energy sources, which ultimately comes back to a polluting source such as diesel. ^^Biodiesel is a lot like ethanol. A renewable, less-polluting additive that can can be blended with current fuels, but not a viable fuel by itself right now. Commercial biodiesel vendors rarely sell higher than 20% blends. Deregulation of fuel standards would do a lot to make biodiesel more easily produced and sold, but that is unrealistic given the current political climate.[Edited on November 16, 2005 at 6:43 PM. Reason : 1]
11/16/2005 6:33:13 PM
public transportation.
11/17/2005 12:44:39 AM
So who else thinks Josh8315 is living in an alternate reality?
11/17/2005 8:24:47 AM
JonHGuth doesn't seem to think so. LoneSnark does think so. Anyone else for Josh8315?
11/17/2005 10:31:14 AM