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Increasing Fuel Mileage With Hydrogen?

cr0sh asks: "I was recently looking into the costs and availabilty associated with small, hydrogen fuel cells (results: they are still expensive), when I came across this site about the Hydrogen-Boost [Warning: Pop-ups]. Looking at this site, it seemed like just another in the long line of scamming 'get more mileage/power' engine products out there, but it intrigued me enough to continue looking into it. I eventually came upon another site on hydrogen experiments. A little more searching revealed this one about constructing your own Hydro-Boost device, which goes into detail about how you would build such a system. None of these sites answered the big questions, however: 'does it work?', and 'if so, how well?'. I also wanted something a little more authoritative. So, back to digging...which came up with this paper from OSTI [PDF]. The very first line of the abstract of this paper reads 'It is well known that hydrogen addition to spark-ignited (SI) engines can reduce exhaust emissions and increase efficiency.' This paper seems to advance the notion that such a system like the 'Hydrogen Boost' system may actually work. Does Slashdot think such a system would work? If so, how it could be improved, especially given today's rapidly rising gasoline prices, here in America?"

"On the experiments site, via the link to 'Hydrogen Experiments Part 2', the author references the first site. He ultimately decides to 'home-brew' his own system instead, and gives enough detail for anybody to do so. I was hoping the author had more details on the effects caused by dumping hydrogen into his engine, but that doesn't appear to be.

A notable observation on the Hydro Boost Device is that instead of using a stainless steel mesh as the other guy uses (which would seem to be a superior material to use, though difficult to find), this design uses galvanized steel bolts for the electrodes, making it something that can be built from materials found at a local building materials warehouse."

352 comments

  1. Hydrogen isn't ready... check out hybrids by Gortbusters.org · · Score: 4, Informative

    I did some research and ended up chosing a Honda hybrid. There just wasn't enough of an availability to the consumer to drive something based on hydrogen. At least not yet.

    My civic hybrid gets 45-47 MPG, is quiet as hell, and was fairly cheap. GM and Ford both have alternative fuel vehicle programs, but until I can go down to the local dealer and drive home with a hydrogen F-150, I'll be in a hybrid.

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    Free your mind.
    1. Re:Hydrogen isn't ready... check out hybrids by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      There is also that crazy VW concept car that got like, what, 190 MPG? Of course, it was only a one person car, but still. That's pretty amazing.

    2. Re:Hydrogen isn't ready... check out hybrids by parc · · Score: 5, Informative

      Here, here!

      I've had a civic hybrid for almost a year now. Overall, it's averaging 41 mpg. Not incredible, but I live in a hilly, HOT area. A/C drags down the fuel effeciency considerably. I pull about 45 mpg without A/C. On long trips over relativley flat roads, I get about 47 mpg.

      And, just to contradict myself, I also own a 2000 Toyota Celica That get 28-30mpg in the summer (with A/C) and has gotten as high as 35-38 mpg on long trips.

    3. Re:Hydrogen isn't ready... check out hybrids by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Umm, you need to like read stuff before you post.
      It wasnt about H fuel cells buddie, nice try.

    4. Re:Hydrogen isn't ready... check out hybrids by heliosnorf · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Have you driven a Toyota Prius? If so , do you like the Civic Hybrid better? I've heard from some people that the Civic is supposed to handle better on turns, but other than that (and the fact that it looks more like a normal car), I haven't heard much pro or con discussion between the Civic and Prius...

      --

      "A good traveller has no fixed plans and is not intent on arriving." -Lao Tzu
    5. Re:Hydrogen isn't ready... check out hybrids by Apreche · · Score: 2, Funny

      I think you've got something a little confused. This isn't about alternative fuel or Hydrogen Fuel Cells as you are thinking. Because fuel cell cars are indeed what GM and Ford are looking to in the future. Fuel cells will eventually revolutionize the automobile.

      This story isn't about fuel cells. It is about using Hydrogen, which is very combustible to enhance your engine's efficiency. Somehow you put hydrogen into your engine, it ignites, and thus you can use less fuel to get the same power. aka a Hydrogen Boost.

      A Hybrid is the most practical choice if you want to buy a modern environmentally friendly car. This is talking about making normal cars better.

      --
      The GeekNights podcast is going strong. Listen!
    6. Re:Hydrogen isn't ready... check out hybrids by redcane · · Score: 1

      I want something that gets good emissions, but still sounds like the beast it should be. As well as being a decent performer..... I think Hydrogen can do that now... But with a small range... Hell I only get 300 km's or so on a tank now on petrol, so If I can get near that on hydrogen I'm happy.

    7. Re:Hydrogen isn't ready... check out hybrids by Gortbusters.org · · Score: 4, Informative

      I have driven the Toytoa Prius... I thought it had worse pickup than the Civic Hybrid. I actually test drove the Prius twice. Bottom line: Prius feels like a go cart, Civic feels like a normal sedan.

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    8. Re:Hydrogen isn't ready... check out hybrids by Gortbusters.org · · Score: 1

      Ok, it's true... I saw the headline and scanned the links noting the feasibility of fuel cells as a technology.

      Creating a gas/fuel cell hybrid if you will. But most of my original comment still remains: unless I can buy it at a dealer, I probably won't void my warrant by "modding" it.

      In a geeky slashdot way, I can see the allure in modding up an engine with fuel cells. In a practical way, if you want better gas mileage, you're better off with the hybrid. Or maybe just a normal "lite" car.. ditch the SUV.

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      Free your mind.
    9. Re:Hydrogen isn't ready... check out hybrids by PD · · Score: 2, Interesting

      My Geo Metro used to get 55 MPG. I would think that hybrids should be able to get more than that.

    10. Re:Hydrogen isn't ready... check out hybrids by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree that hydrogen is not ready. A good candidate for a hybrid which would allow it to use many different fuels and burn them cleanly is one which would use a bladeless turbine. They are very simple to manufacture.

    11. Re:Hydrogen isn't ready... check out hybrids by parc · · Score: 4, Informative

      We weren't given the chance. The local Toyota dealer wouldn't let us drive it. We were expected to purchase it on faith.

      The Prius was pretty small, and would have been a step down from our existing car (another civic). Combined with the price, the civic was a better car.

      Note that I own both a Toyota and a Honda, so I wasn't leaning towards the Honda simply from customer loyalty. In the end, the size of the car and the price were the deciding factors. The Prius had a markup, and the Civic didn't, so the civic was about 2k less than the prius.

    12. Re:Hydrogen isn't ready... check out hybrids by parc · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Your geo metro had about the same power engine as the Civic. The civic loses mpg because it's a much larger car than the metro was. I get my milage with an automatic transmission. The manual gets slightly better mileage(but not MUCH more, as the auto has a continuously variable transmission).

    13. Re:Hydrogen isn't ready... check out hybrids by Gortbusters.org · · Score: 1

      I think if I lived in a pretty much completely flat area, the MPG would be closer to 50. The need for lots of uphill acceleration drops the MPG pretty quick.

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    14. Re:Hydrogen isn't ready... check out hybrids by Gortbusters.org · · Score: 2, Informative

      True that brother, there were other things I didn't like about the Prius...

      Why oh why do they have the shifter next to the steering wheel blocking site to the center console?

      Speedometer is right underneath the windshield in the middle. Weird.

      --
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      Free your mind.
    15. Re:Hydrogen isn't ready... check out hybrids by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I probably won't void my warrant by "modding" it.

      I can see the allure in modding up an engine with fuel cells.

      Ok, two things. This ISN'T ABOUT FUEL CELLS. This, in fact, has nothing to do with fuel cells. This has to do with *cough*NOS*cough* or something similar. I have a sneaking suspicion the poster is probably a bit of a rice-boy, although that's not a bad thing. Fact of the matter is that many people ARE interested in voiding their warranty via 'modding' their vehicles. There was this whole thing in the lat fifties called 'Hot-Rods'. Maybe you've heard of it?

      And, while, using a nitrous gas to boost your car's horsepower is one thing, this is an attempt at improving fuel efficiency. And I'm all for it.

    16. Re:Hydrogen isn't ready... check out hybrids by Gortbusters.org · · Score: 1

      Alright, so with war on the brain, almost none of us have gotten the point of this article. Someday, god willing, we shall rtfa :)

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      Free your mind.
    17. Re:Hydrogen isn't ready... check out hybrids by bluGill · · Score: 1

      Why would you drive a Hydrogen F-150 over your Honda Civic? The F-150 was built for work, often on conditions that require a little off-road. Great for light construction or farm work. The Handeling cannot be made as good as a car, (assuming the car wasn't baddly designed, a '30's car is likely worse than today's F-150 for example) and because it is designed to haul a load it has to use more energy to move. (Real output power, input power can be controlled to some extent)

      Mind you there are many good reasons to get a F-150. However if your needs are served by a Civic I don't see why you would get a F150.

      BTW, Hybrids are the wrong solution for some people. I recomend you looking diesels. like VW's TDI for a different alternative that is better for hiway driving. Which is best depends on how you drive of course, but a hybrid is not the best solution for everyone.

    18. Re:Hydrogen isn't ready... check out hybrids by Gortbusters.org · · Score: 1

      I just love the F-150, I don't really need it.. I want it. As a male in his 20s, I feel the need for large 4x4 power.

      But as someone who wants to help stop pollution, stop wasting gasoline, and such... I had to trade in my F-150 lightning for the hybrid. An alternative fuel F-150 would probably still be pretty wasteful, but hey... if it was clean / cheap waste, I'd be up for it!

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      Free your mind.
    19. Re:Hydrogen isn't ready... check out hybrids by buck_wild · · Score: 1

      How exactly does the civic fare on (highway) hills? Are you able to maintain speed, or must you get in the slow lane?

      --
      If all you have is a hammer, everything looks like a nail.
    20. Re:Hydrogen isn't ready... check out hybrids by LilGuy · · Score: 0, Troll

      Well at least you guys had enough sense to buy foreign cars. If not for any other reason, they're just put together better, and hold up nicer. /flames abound I'm sure.

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      You're nothing; like me.
    21. Re:Hydrogen isn't ready... check out hybrids by cr0sh · · Score: 1

      Well, I don't mind modding this into the engine - it isn't really that big of a mod, either - basically tee off the PCV valve and route the hydrogen down the vacuum line into the engine (the vacuum is created by the air intake manifold, and thus goes into the air intake). The tee would be easy to take off later if needed - besides that, I drive a 94 Ford Ranger 4-banger, 116K miles, long out of warantee...

      --
      Reason is the Path to God - Anon
    22. Re:Hydrogen isn't ready... check out hybrids by Gortbusters.org · · Score: 1

      It maintains speed just fine... I just sit there with cruise control on and I don't notice anything. Best RPMs for acceleration for the Civic is around 3000, the Prius 4000. In other words, you're fine on the highway.

      One of the honda salesman says he sold a bunch of Civics to a business for a commuting fleet, the highway performance was the sell over the Prius. Take what you will from that statement from a salesman, but it seems to be true.

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      Free your mind.
    23. Re:Hydrogen isn't ready... check out hybrids by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My dodge neon gets 40 mpg on the highway.. I've gotten 48 before. It's bigger, more roomy (heavier too) and has about twice the power of the civic hybrid.

      Clearly the efficiency of my car far outstrips that of yours, and mine's a plain cheap littls fossil fuel beast BUT THATS NOT THE QUESTION!

      This post was about hydrogen added to increase efficiency.... not about what car to buy.

    24. Re:Hydrogen isn't ready... check out hybrids by Queer+Boy · · Score: 1
      My civic hybrid gets 45-47 MPG

      I drive a 1995 Mercury Tracer and I get between 30 and 35 miles per gallon. 10 more miles per gallon for a "modern" hybrid car seems utterly unimpressive. Basically as long as you're not driving some god awful SUV you should get about the same. My friend's 2000 VW Jetta gets almost 40 MPG.

      --
      Not since Marie-Antoinette played milkmaid has looking simple and honest been so fake and complicated.
    25. Re:Hydrogen isn't ready... check out hybrids by CraigV · · Score: 1

      We live in the Sierra Foothills and have a Toyota Prius. After 5000 miles of mountain driving, we average 47 mpg. In the little bit of city driving we have done, we got 56 mpg. The engine turns on and off as needed, typically 50 times per hour in mountains and city driving. With hybrids, energy is primarily lost to air and rolling resistance, not breaking and waiting at stop lights. The worst mileage (45 mpg or so) is with high-speed freeway driving.

      Its 1.5 liter engine is the same size as my Honda Civic Wagon, but the Prius can get additional acceleration from its Electric Motor. Power is no problem.

      My wife drives more aggressively than I, and gets 46-47 mpg on her 66 mile mountain commute. I usually can get 51-56 mpg by driving gently so that nearly all braking is done with the regenerative braking (motor as generator); the "real" brakes hardly ever get used and should last a very long time.

      The hybrid technology will work with all sizes of vehicles and all styles of combustion engines (e.g. hydrogen). And it is here now!

    26. Re:Hydrogen isn't ready... check out hybrids by gladbach · · Score: 1

      This is true, but we are talking about americans here.... A huge hell of a lot of us would rather bomb iraq than give up their pickups that they hardly ever use to haul shit, just so they can display their gun racks in their back windows...

      --
      "Computer games don't affect kids; I mean if Pac-Man affected us as kids, we'd all be running around in darkened rooms,
    27. Re:Hydrogen isn't ready... check out hybrids by Goth+Biker+Babe · · Score: 1

      Then there's turbo diesels. For example the Rover 25 2.0ltr Turbo Diesel has an extra-urban cycle of 67mpg which equates to 54mpg using US gallons. Performance isn't too bad either.

    28. Re:Hydrogen isn't ready... check out hybrids by mpe · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It is about using Hydrogen, which is very combustible to enhance your engine's efficiency. Somehow you put hydrogen into your engine, it ignites, and thus you can use less fuel to get the same power. aka a Hydrogen Boost.

      You are simply replacing some of the hydrocarbons in the fuel supply with hydrogen.

      This is talking about making normal cars better.

      At the expense of a far more complicated fuel system. Since one fuel is a liquid the other is a gas. So you can't simply pre mix fuel in a storage tank. As you could do with an ethanol & alkene mixture or even methane and hydrogen.

    29. Re:Hydrogen isn't ready... check out hybrids by mpe · · Score: 1

      Creating a gas/fuel cell hybrid if you will. But most of my original comment still remains: unless I can buy it at a dealer, I probably won't void my warrant by "modding" it.

      A bigger show stopper is likely to be "where do I refuel it?"

    30. Re:Hydrogen isn't ready... check out hybrids by Fat+Casper · · Score: 1
      I know what you mean. My 96 Suzuki Esteem always got around 40. My best tank was 42.2 MPG. Underpowered, but underweight, too. Peppy little car, and I got the mileage while driving its tiny little wheels off. It taught me to resent getting less than 400 miles per tank.

      --
      I spent a year in Iraq looking for WMD and all I found was this lousy sig.
    31. Re:Hydrogen isn't ready... check out hybrids by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bottom line: Prius feels like a go cart, Civic feels like a normal sedan.

      Weird. In my circles saying something feels like a go-kart instead of a sedan is a compliment.

    32. Re:Hydrogen isn't ready... check out hybrids by bluGill · · Score: 1

      Ahh, your second reason is one I'm wresteling with now. Unfortunatly I can't make an ecconomic justification for a second car now, no matter how little gas it uses (unless it is cheap and runs good). With the added insurance on two cars (even though when I drive one the other is in the driveway) I can't save enough on gas to afford a second car.

      I doin't use my truck (S-10) to haul often, but I do use it to haul. For some things I could rent a truck, but that is expensive in its own way. (I'd do it for a few times a year though) It doesn't get my gear hunting though because rental places don't allow driving on the roads I take. So I'm stuck with a trust that is a compromise (when I need a truck a 3/4 ton would be best) because it is cheapest.

    33. Re:Hydrogen isn't ready... check out hybrids by DeadSea · · Score: 1
      Hybrids are great. I have 36,000 miles on my insight at this point. The only problem I have is that my gas milage really falls in the Winter (Boston). As a result, I don't get the kind of milage advertised for my car.

      Vehicle: Prius
      MPG Overall: MPG Summer: 37 MPG Winter: 46
      Comments: winter decline due to heater, cold batteries when start, oxygenated fuel in winter

      Vehicle: Prius
      MPG Overall: MPG Summer: better MPG Winter: MPG 40-45
      Comments:

      Vehicle: Civic
      MPG Overall: MPG Summer: 46-48 MPG Winter: low 40s
      Comments: winter decline due to: snow tires; when temp is below freezing, or heater on, engine doesn't shut off at a stop; driving shorter distances in winter.

      Vehicle: Prius
      MPG Overall: MPG Summer: 46 MPG Winter: 36
      Comments: using heater makes a difference. Car not garaged at night.

      Vehicle: Prius
      MPG Overall: MPG Summer: mid 40s MPG Winter: high 30s
      Comments: Season makes a big difference. One factor is short trips.

      Vehicle: Prius
      MPG Overall: MPG Summer: 45 MPG Winter: 35
      Comments: MPG improves after warming up. Inflates tires to 42/40 rather than 35/33 Toyota recommends.

      Vehicle: Insight
      MPG Overall: 64 (3 years) MPG Summer: 70-75 MPG Winter: 45-55
      Comments: Also got worse in winter with Geo Metro: 45-50 summer, 38-45 winter.

      Vehicle: Insight
      MPG Overall: 62 MPG Summer: MPG Winter:
      Comments: Some dropoff in winter, but not much since "learned how to drive more consistently." Keeping tire pressure at 36/35 important; also driving slower - once drove to Cape keeping under 60 mph, and got 80 mpg.

      Vehicle: Civic
      MPG Overall: MPG Summer: MPG Winter: about 27
      Comments: do almost all city driving, mpg got worse in winter.

      Vehicle: Civic
      MPG Overall: 43.3 MPG Summer: MPG Winter:
      Comments: driving at least 50% highway miles.

    34. Re:Hydrogen isn't ready... check out hybrids by StacyKr · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The thing is I compared the Prius and the Civic Hybrid environmentally - the Prius is classified as a Super Ultra Low emission vehicle (SULEV), while the Civic Hybrid is simply considered a Ultra Low Emissions vehicle (ULEV).

      CA has a program that supports the purchase of SULEVs, ULEVs, and Zero Emission vehicles (all-electric cars are Zero Emission vehicles, and CA has a great car charging infrastructure, form the maps I can see online.

      The Prius has somewhat higher mileage (52 city/45 hiway) than the Civic Hybrid (45/51), but the gasoline Civic Sedan gets good mileage as well (38/43), so when it comes to reasons to purchase a hybrid,the issue really is the eleimination or vast reduction of emissions, not necessarily huge mileage improvement.

      Diesels DO get great mileage, but have a horrific emissions problems - everyone has been behind a pretty, old Mercedes coupe to just get choked by the fumes as it pulls away from the light.

      Final point: If you do decide to buy a hybrid vehicle in 2003, you can get a max. $2,000 tax incentive, but W and his Haliburton cronies have made sure this small incentive has been eliminated for the 2004 tax year.

    35. Re:Hydrogen isn't ready... check out hybrids by wwwssabbsdotcom · · Score: 1

      I just picked up a used 2000 Honda Inisght and Im averaging 62MPG just on the 2nd tank. I love it, A/C and stereo and paid less than 1/2 the price of a new one. Hydrogen as a primary source of fuel for vehicles is still a ways away, although right now hybrids is a good path towards the end goal of fuelcells/hydrogen only vehicles. Downsides - a bit of road noise (no wind noise), its not meant to be a sports car, so its not overly fast, and its not really great in snow.

      There are many reasons for going hybrid. The reasons are two-fold - cutting emmisions and cutting dependance on foreign oil. Personally, Ill be saving $1000 a year, even after you calculate insurance and filling the tank for $15 a week instead of a SUV for $40 a week. On that $15 I can travel 500-700 miles compared to 450 in the SUV.

      For more info, if interested, you can visit http://www.honda.com , http://www.insightcentral.net or http://www.toyota.com

      --
      Relive the BBS Past - One Byte at a Time! www.ssabbs.com
    36. Re:Hydrogen isn't ready... check out hybrids by amunter · · Score: 1

      I have driven both of them. One friend bought a Prius and one bought a Civic. The Civic was anticlimactic. It drove just like a regular Civic except for the fact that it was very very quiet.

      However the Prius reminded me all the time that I was driving a very different car. The braking felt wierd as the regenerative brakes kicked in. The dashboard had this massive and distracting display in it with cutesy graphics showing where the power was coming from. When I started from a stop to back out of a parking spot the engine did not even turn on at all until I got going (my friend calls this "stealth mode"). The acceleration was not predictable for me since I guess the electric assist was determined by pressure on the gas pedal, and I did not know exactly where to expect the extra power. I assume I would get used to that in time.

      One thing that was pretty cool about the Prius was the surprisingly huge trunk, but neither of them let you put the backseats forward to hold long things in the trunk (the batteries are in the way I guess).

      The Civic felt more comfortable, gets almost exactly the same mileage (better mileage on the highway, iirc), and supposedly has slightly worse emmisions. The Prius is probably more high-tech and has a big goofy LCD in the dash that can be the display for a GPS mapping system. It also looks like something different, so that can be attractive as well.

      After trying both of them I bought a Subaru Impreza. I am 6foot 3inches tall with long legs. With my foot on the brake pedal on either of these cars my knee touched the steering wheel, so I decided to just buy something I fit into well and would feel safe driving for about the same price.

      Something I have never been clear on is the distinction between SULEV and ULEV. I had heard that SULEV is simply a California thing and the difference between the Prius and Civic was that one was Cali. certivied SULEV and one was not, but that the emissions were similar.

    37. Re:Hydrogen isn't ready... check out hybrids by TheCarp · · Score: 1

      > I just love the F-150, I don't really need it.. I want it.
      > As a male in his 20s, I feel the need for large 4x4 power.

      As another male in his 20s I can certainly understand that. I feel the
      same urges myself. PMore power grunt grunt.

      However I also realise it and try not to make my decisions in life based on it.

      Except I did buy a motorcycle. Want 40 MPG in the city and better on the higheway? Just about any bike will do it.... and still out accelerate nearly anything on the road.

      In fact, thats 40 MPG while out accelerating everything and generally zooming around like an idiot who doesn't give a shit about his gas milage.

      Not to mention the balls factor... you can have all the F-150's you want, nothing is as cool as a bike. Whens the last time you were in a F-150 and some dude in a shitbox rolled down his window at a stoplight and started telling you about the truck he used to have?

      Happens all the time on my bike. In fact, it took me several months to get over the fact that heads would turn as I rode doen the street. People would randomly wave or give a thumbs up (especially other riders but less often in the city)

      Oh yea, and all the cagers get so jealous when you scoot through a traffic jam and get shave a good 20 mins off your commute.

      Of course, you have to be more careful, and you have to practice riding and think about how you stay alive on a bike if you wanna ride long term. However, thats just the price you pay for style and efficiency.

      -Steve

      --
      "I opened my eyes, and everything went dark again"
    38. Re:Hydrogen isn't ready... check out hybrids by Mysticalfruit · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but that old mercedes coupe can be modifited to run on waste vegetable oil, so instead of choking fumes, you get the french fry smell instead...

      check out www.greasecar.com

      Personally, I just bought a regular non hybrid civic (I wanted the hybrid sedan, but it was just too much money) and my civic has consistenty gotten 38mpg.

      --
      Yes Francis, the world has gone crazy.
    39. Re:Hydrogen isn't ready... check out hybrids by Mysticalfruit · · Score: 1

      My honda civic was built in Ohio by Americans.

      --
      Yes Francis, the world has gone crazy.
    40. Re:Hydrogen isn't ready... check out hybrids by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In my circles saying something feels like a go-kart instead of a sedan is a compliment.

      Then you must be used to rapid acceleration to 5mph and then no acceleration beyond that.

    41. Re:Hydrogen isn't ready... check out hybrids by SillySlashdotName · · Score: 2, Informative

      You are simply replacing some of the hydrocarbons in the fuel supply with hydrogen.

      No, you are supplementing the combustable mixture in the engine. As long as you are not supplying more fuel than can be burned by the available O2, the more fuel burned completely, the better.

      At the expense of a far more complicated fuel system. Since one fuel is a liquid the other is a gas.

      Yeah, but...

      Ever heard of Nitrous Oxide (NO2)? Used in racing to help increase the performance of the vehicle, works by cooling the air (making it denser - more air - therefore more O2 - through the carb) before it enters the carb, does not burn or otherwise directly enhance POWER, just lets the fuel that is used burn more completely, more efficiently. So how about using hydrogen under pressure instead of NO2? The expanding gas would cool the incoming air as the NO2 does, but the hydrogen would ALSO burn, potentially adding to the power produced. However, also possibly using up (enough of) the O2 so the fuel DOSEN'T burn completely, which would INCREASE emissions and could REDUCE power.

      So how about injecting hydrogen AND oxygen? Other than the explosive hazard (H2 and O2 combine nicely and guickly, give the chance) and the fire hazard (hot greasy engine and pure O2 - not a safe combination!), there is the fact that this is an exothermic reaction.

      "Gentlemen! Melt your engines!"

      Ooops!

      --
      Acts of massive stupidity are almost never covered by warranty. --me.
    42. Re:Hydrogen isn't ready... check out hybrids by SillySlashdotName · · Score: 1

      I agree.

      I drive a '84 Nissan KingCab MPG pickup almost daily, regularly getting 30 - 36 MPG in town. I test drove a Honda InSight (a buddy then bought it - he has a longer commute than I do...) but, other than the body cancer, the truck is in good condition, and I just could not justify the purchase. Maybe after I get the 100,000 mile service done next month, I can get even better milage...

      --
      Acts of massive stupidity are almost never covered by warranty. --me.
    43. Re:Hydrogen isn't ready... check out hybrids by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It doesn't get my gear hunting though because rental places don't allow driving on the roads I take.

      If they are roads then the rental company shouldn't care as long as you don't describe them in detail as "rutted logging roads" or "dry creekbeds." It's only offroading if it isn't a on a road.

    44. Re:Hydrogen isn't ready... check out hybrids by jonbrewer · · Score: 1

      "Diesels DO get great mileage, but have a horrific emissions problems - everyone has been behind a pretty, old Mercedes coupe to just get choked by the fumes as it pulls away from the light."

      You've obviously been mistaking the "TDI" badge on many new Volkswagens for a "GTI" badge as they fly by you on the road. Modern diesels do not have horrific emissions problems. In fact, while thier (invisible) particulate emissions are higher than gas engines, their N02 emissions (think acid rain) are actually lower than gas engines.

      You must also consider the environmental impact of refining and transporting fuel. Any car that gets 45 mpg (US) is going to be better for the environment than one that gets 23 mpg, even if that 23 mpg is a LEV gas engine car with no particulate emissions. Remember, the oil you burn as gas is being shipped half-way around the world using diesel powered ships, then to refining, then to gas stations using diesel powered trucks.

    45. Re:Hydrogen isn't ready... check out hybrids by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      I live in an area that is always downhill, and my mileage is great!

    46. Re:Hydrogen isn't ready... check out hybrids by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      not for long, as the source of this stuff isn't readily available (one must go knocking).

      and it doesn't scale. replace all the cars with biodiesel ones and we're up a creek.

    47. Re:Hydrogen isn't ready... check out hybrids by brysnot · · Score: 1

      your Geo Metro may have gotten 55 MPG but it didn't get you the ladies.

    48. Re:Hydrogen isn't ready... check out hybrids by ncc74656 · · Score: 1

      HTF is this +1 Insightful? I don't see many imports around here that are as old as (for instance) my '77 Cutlass Supreme, and the few that are still on the road are almost always clapped-out beaters that belch thick smoke as soon as you give them some gas. While there are plenty of older American cars that have been allowed to fall apart, it's not at all hard to find one that still looks nice and runs nice. I'll allow that the bigger models aren't always the easiest on gas (one of the reasons I also have an '02 S-10 now), but your choice in the 70s and earlier was either (1) great performance and not-as-good mileage or (2) better mileage and lousy performance.

      --
      20 January 2017: the End of an Error.
    49. Re:Hydrogen isn't ready... check out hybrids by Gortbusters.org · · Score: 1

      I'm 6'4", and yes my legs do bend while I'm in either of those cars. The center divider in the Civic does get in the way a little for me, but it's not too bad.

      In the brochure at the dealer, I think the SULEV is available for the Civic... maybe as an option? I'm not sure on that.

      --
      --------
      Free your mind.
    50. Re:Hydrogen isn't ready... check out hybrids by Gortbusters.org · · Score: 1

      Yeah, it blew my mind trading in my awesome truck for a little hybrid!

      I had lusted over the 2000 F-150 lightning for a long time, and before the f-150 lightning I had a big extended cab 4x4 F-150 (97).

      The problem is that being able to drive over hills, threw streams, and haul crap is cool. Walking around saying you got awesome gas mileage is not... at least not for our age. Makes me feel a little bit older when driving it.

      --
      --------
      Free your mind.
    51. Re:Hydrogen isn't ready... check out hybrids by awmyhr · · Score: 1

      I've had a Prius since late 2000, and am very, very happy with it. It I happen to like it's 'futuristic/quirky' look. The speedomoter in the upper-middle of the dashboard is something I originally saw in the Toyota Echo, takes about 5 seconds to get used to, and actually is much better placement, IMHO. Other then my first car ('70s Olds Cutless), it outperforms all my previous vehicles (Chevy Citation, Chevy Corisca, Fords Festiva, Ford Aspire). Comfortably fits four adults, smooth and quiet ride. Not to mention the great gas millage and low emmisions.
      I've seen the Civic Hybrid, and, while it may also be a very nice vehicle, I don't like it cuz, well, it LOOKS like a civic, a plain, normal, average, every day car - not for me.
      I'm extremely happy with my Prius, and eagerly await the Toyota Highlander/Lexus R330 hybrids which I've heard will be out in about a years time and have the same gas millage/emmissions...

      --
      This space for rent...
    52. Re:Hydrogen isn't ready... check out hybrids by PD · · Score: 1

      Actually it did, if you stuck one of her legs out the right window, and the other leg out the left.

    53. Re:Hydrogen isn't ready... check out hybrids by jafac · · Score: 1

      The VW Beetle Diesel gets 53 mpg Highway. So I'm not really all that impressed with the expensive new hybrid technologies.

      My 31 yr old VW Karmann Ghia with a flat-four aircooled 1600cc engine gets 36 mpg Highway.

      We really have not come all that far in 30 years.

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
    54. Re:Hydrogen isn't ready... check out hybrids by HoChiWaWa · · Score: 1

      Diesels DO get great mileage, but have a horrific emissions problems - everyone has been behind a pretty, old Mercedes coupe to just get choked by the fumes as it pulls away from the light.

      thats kind of true. you see diesel engines do seem to pollute more when you smell them but the thing is there are less greenhouss gasses and harmful emessions, there is just a whole lot more soot. they have made vast progress in cutting down this soot leaving cleaner and more efficent engines

    55. Re:Hydrogen isn't ready... check out hybrids by Mysticalfruit · · Score: 1

      Well that's the thing. Most fast food places have to pay to get rid of their waste cooking oil by the gallon. So, if you come along with a 55 gallon drum and offer to siphon some off, I don't see how any self respecting manager of a fast food place is going to turn you down.

      And replacing all the cars with biodiesel ones just shifts the problems. However, it would be cool to have a converted big rig that ran on waste cooking oil.

      --
      Yes Francis, the world has gone crazy.
    56. Re:Hydrogen isn't ready... check out hybrids by HiThere · · Score: 1

      I thought that Nitrous Oxide was N2O2...

      I know that there are a lot of Nitrogen Oxides, though. But I was fairly sure of that one...

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    57. Re:Hydrogen isn't ready... check out hybrids by boskone · · Score: 1

      i had a 90 geo metro. 3 cylinder 1 liter engine. No AC or power anything. Manual transmission. Running good gas and good synthetic oil in the crankcase, i averaged 49 MPG on the highway and 42 MPG in town. This was on a (at the time) $3000 5 year old car.

      when you consider the environmental impact of the things you do, make sure to not just count the gasoline you will save over the life of it, but also the environmental costs to make it. so your 30K hybrid may actually cause more damage than that 10K geo, even though there is a slight difference in mileage. (and for those who must have more features, they did have automatics and AC for slightly more $$ and slightly worse gas mileage).

      Not to troll, but I think a lot of people going for the expensive alternative cars are not doing it based purely on what's best for the environment. I'm sure a lot of owners have good intentions, but do your research first.

      PS, for those in California running on electric cars... how does California generate it's power?

      Just my $.02

      PS, I do think that continued research and advancement is necessary and possible, but I think people get too wrapped up in spending a lot of money to save that last 10% mileage that could be better applied to other uses.

    58. Re:Hydrogen isn't ready... check out hybrids by juhaz · · Score: 1

      But you can rest assured that it was designed by Japanese.

      R&D is the most expensive and most important part of car manufacturing just as much as almost every industry.

    59. Re:Hydrogen isn't ready... check out hybrids by SillySlashdotName · · Score: 1

      Nope, I don't see N2O2 listed...

      From WebElements.com the listed Oxides of Nitrogen are :

      NO
      N2O
      N2O3
      N2O4
      N2O5

      Note that N2O2 is missing from the list.

      On the other hand, NO2 is Nitrogen Dioxide, not Nitrous Oxide (N2O).

      (could N2O/2/ that have been a typo?)

      --
      Acts of massive stupidity are almost never covered by warranty. --me.
    60. Re:Hydrogen isn't ready... check out hybrids by buck_wild · · Score: 1

      Interesting. Thanks!

      --
      If all you have is a hammer, everything looks like a nail.
    61. Re:Hydrogen isn't ready... check out hybrids by Mysticalfruit · · Score: 1

      I'm totally okay with that. The Japanese build good stuff.

      Though I'm a bit pissed I haven't seen any giant robots yet...

      --
      Yes Francis, the world has gone crazy.
    62. Re:Hydrogen isn't ready... check out hybrids by SaDan · · Score: 1

      Most of the time when you see something that's diesel powered spewing all kinds of black smoke it's because someone's turned up the fuel delivery for more power.

      A properly maintained diesel engine will puff black smoke when accelerating under a pretty good load, but it shouldn't be sustained.

      My diesel engine in my K5 does not blow tons of smoke unless I stand on the accelerator from a dead stop. Even then, once I reach 30mph, it doesn't smoke unless I redline the engine (running way outside of it's efficient RPM range).

      Don't forget, gasoline engines can smoke just as bad as diesel engines.

    63. Re:Hydrogen isn't ready... check out hybrids by sjames · · Score: 1

      I don't see many imports around here that are as old as (for instance) my '77 Cutlass Supreme,

      There are several factors. For one, Japanese cars were struggling to break into the U.S. market in the '70s, so most of the cars from that time are going to be U.S. made. For another, Japanese cars from the early '70s really weren't designed for the U.S. market. They were just learning what was required. That was 30 years ago, and a lot has changed.

      However, I will grant that an Olds from the '70s is a great car. I have one myself.

  2. Forget efficiency go with NOS by phelddagrif · · Score: 3, Funny

    Efficiency is for tree hugging hippies. You drive a car because you want insane power at your disposal. So you need a NOS system, not a hydrogen system. However, if you combined the two.. Imagine the possibilities.

    1. Re:Forget efficiency go with NOS by TheNetAvenger · · Score: 1

      Gas guzzlers are for close minded fools, and have helped to further create our dependence on countries like Iraq. I suppose you hail Saddam every time you get in your SUV? Hydrogen fuel cells with electric motors will not only dust combustion based vehicles in performance and power, but will not pollute the world or create dependence on foreign countries.

    2. Re:Forget efficiency go with NOS by eviljolly · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I drive a modified 93 mustang with about 365 horsepower, and I enjoy it. I still get 22-25mpg on the freeway which isn't bad at all for what it is. People for some reason have come to the idea that performance=lack of gas mileage which is completely untrue. Just because more air is able to get into the engine does not mean that it has to. Basically what I'm saying is that you have still have a high horsepower car and not spend more money on gas than someone with the same car and less horsepower provided you don't floor it
      all of the time. My car actually gets better gas mileage than stock...

    3. Re:Forget efficiency go with NOS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Hahahahhahahahahahahaa

      Gawd thats such a goofy argument.

      First, with the SUV crap thats going around.

      I have a 2001 GMC Jimmy that gets 22 mpg. I see plenty of rusted, piece of shit honda civics being driven by piss-poor college students, with greenpeace stickers on the bumpers. I guarantee they use more fuel than I do. And they'd be riding the bus if they really cared about oil conservation and the environment.

      The actual fuel consumption differences between an 'economy car' and a full sized sedan are insignificant.

      And the actual amount of oil that goes into cars engines is insignificant as well.

      Know why gas is pricy right now? Nope, it's not the middle east or Iraq. It's been a cold, cold fucking winter and the refinery industry focused on heating oil production. Couple that with the fact no refineries have been built in 30 years, you have less supply. Increasing demand + diminishing supply = higher cost.

      Besides, the big hydrogen producing plants of your utopian future wont be in america. They'll be filthy environmental nightmares. Let the 3rd world have 'em.

    4. Re:Forget efficiency go with NOS by Courageous · · Score: 1

      You're correct more than you know. By nature, turbochargers, blowers, and the like all _increase_ fuel efficiency precisely _because_ they get their additional power out of a more effective burn.

      C//

    5. Re:Forget efficiency go with NOS by JWSmythe · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      365hp from a Mustang? Congratulations.. Not too often I see a good strong Mustang. Ford really messed up making their GT's so weak. I hear the new Cobra's are going to be closer to 400hp. I've seen a few great Mustangs up in your class. My favorite was a late 80's, with a 351 and NOS. *THAT* was a quick car. As far as I know, the owner never dyno'd it, so I don't know the horsepower.

      I've driven a '95 and '2000 Mustang GT, and was upset how slow they were. We don't even need to get into how bad the V6 convertables are. :)

      I drive a 2000 TransAm WS/6. I just drove it from Florida to California and with the cruise set to 80mph in 6th gear the engine was under 2k RPM and I got 26mpg.. :) Not bad for a mostly stock 330hp car.. I manage around 20 with a mix of city and highway driving. Los Angeles traffic doesn't help though. "Hey, we're on the 110 leaving downtown at rush hour. Set the parking brake, and light a cigerette, we'll be here for a while."

      I used to drive a heavily modified 1982 TransAm that was about 400hp (carburated Chevy smallblock 350). It only got about 20mpg. It only had a 4 speed stick, which really hurt. I wanted to go with a 5 speed, but was warned that the stock 5 speed wouldn't handle the power, and I didn't have money to go aftermarket at the time.

      Needless to say if I was seriously running either TransAm, the milage went down. Stop and go oval racing the '82, I got 6 gallons per mile. I just had the 2000 out at a street type track recently. I didn't do a proper fuel estimation, but I went maybe 75 miles on 1/2 tank (8gal).

      After market parts can really do wonders for fuel economy. Of course they're all marketed for speed. :) But applying so much more power, it's easier to push the weight around. Idling along on the highway in 6th gear the throttle is barely pressed to hold my speed. I drove a 4 cyl Acura sedan from Los Angeles to San Diego, and confused myself a few times because pushing the gas a little didn't do anything.. Full throttle on an up-hill on ramp simply isn't the same. I'm a firm believer that people should put more efficent parts on their car (better design cam, higher compression heads, better flowing parts). Do it well, and you'll have a better driving car..

      I guess I should add some Tim "The Tool Man" Taylor grunts here.. {grunt}{grunt}{grunt}

      --
      Serious? Seriousness is well above my pay grade.
    6. Re:Forget efficiency go with NOS by Goonie · · Score: 1
      By nature, turbochargers, blowers, and the like all _increase_ fuel efficiency precisely _because_ they get their additional power out of a more effective burn.

      Not necessarily. What a turbocharger does is pump more fuel/air mixture into the combustion changer. It's entirely plausible that the combusition is less efficient than a naturally aspirated vehicle. Not to mention the energy required to run the pump (though a naturally aspirated engine of similar power would have larger moving masses, more contact areas and thus more friction, and so on).

      IIRC, in practice a well-designed turbocharged engine can be made more efficient than a non-turbo one. For one thing, you're not lumbered with the need to spin a big engine at light throttle.

      --

      Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from a rigged demo
      --Andy Finkel (J. Klass?)
    7. Re:Forget efficiency go with NOS by PurpleFloyd · · Score: 1

      Uhhh... no. Turbos and blowers (superchargers to all you washed masses) put more air into the cylinder. While this may increase fuel economy and power slightly (due to a more complete burn), to get the most out of a forced induction system, you need to put more fuel in. The ideal is for every hydrocarbon molecule, you have exactly enough oxygen to turn that hydrocarbon into carbon dioxide and water. Thus, since more fuel is forced induction systems all decrease fuel efficiency and emissions, while increasing power. While you may be able to compensate by running at a lower RPM for normal driving, the fact remains that an optimally tuned engine with a forced induction system will burn more gas than an equivalent engine without such a system.

      --

      That's it. I'm no longer part of Team Sanity.
    8. Re:Forget efficiency go with NOS by Olmy's+Jart · · Score: 1

      Imagine the possibilities? Yes. Absolutely... Think instant qualification for a Darwin Award. When thinking of combining a high potential oxidizer with a "high heat of oxidation" fuel one should consider the results of the experiments of lighting charcoal with LOX (Liquid Oxygen). I don't have the URL handy for the MOV file but the results are spectacular, to say the least, and the fire department is unlikely to permit a repeat of the experiment. :-) In this case, the oxidizer is less "potent" but the fuel is "without peer". Looking for a place on "What Were They Thinking?", this would do it.

    9. Re:Forget efficiency go with NOS by j3110 · · Score: 1

      No, hydrogen power is for smart adults that would rather not kill people or rape small countries or destroy the planet in order to get from point A to B. Grow up and a heart.

      --
      Karma Clown
    10. Re:Forget efficiency go with NOS by i_am_nitrogen · · Score: 2

      Gasoline is only pricy right now because the oil industry said so. My uncle works for a refinery, he says there's plenty of supply, but the price is set higher. I guess because they can get away with it when there's a "war" going on.

      It's obvious you don't know what you're talking about, otherwise you would've logged in. But whatever, I'll refute your points anyway so nobody else says the same things.

      An economy car, such as the Geo Metro, gets up to 55 MPG. That's more than twice as efficient as your GMC Jimmy, probably four times as efficient as a lot of the trucks around where I live. If you commute 30 miles to/from work, which is about average for the US, at 22MPG, you'll use almost $5 of gasoline each day, $25 a week, $100 a month. If you could spend only $40 a month on gasoline, that $60 could go to something more useful. Or, if you don't need the extra cash, you can donate it to a good cause.

    11. Re:Forget efficiency go with NOS by j3110 · · Score: 1

      How much crack did you smoke before you posted that? Hydrogen is easily produced compared to gasoline. You can drink its waste. You can make Hydrogen from anything really.

      I would settle for alcohol, because we get most of it from corn which has many uses, and can be improved with genetic engineering. There are engines that run fast and have more HP that run on alcohol (also easily concentrated). In fact, there are convertions that you can do to most normal cars to make htme run alcohol since its combustion. It is even a liquid, so it can be pumped at stations. Its fumes aren't poison, and if made properly, you could drink it for energy, burn it for heat, use it to sterilize cuts, etc if you wrecked on a deserted wintery road. (You can also use it's properties of evaporation to keep cool if you break down in a desert, though you can't drink it for moisture. Best of all, it's renewable.

      Either way, you can make your own Hydrogen or Alcohol.

      --
      Karma Clown
    12. Re:Forget efficiency go with NOS by LiENUS · · Score: 1

      my car gets 10mpg :/ when it was new best it ever got was 14 lol
      im about to dump a new engine in that pos to get better gas milage :/

    13. Re:Forget efficiency go with NOS by xtal · · Score: 1


      Imagine the possibilities? Yes. Absolutely... Think instant qualification for a Darwin Award. When thinking of combining a high potential oxidizer with a "high heat of oxidation" fuel one should consider the results of the experiments of lighting charcoal with LOX (Liquid Oxygen).


      Nitrous Oxide, unlike LOX, is perfectly safe at STP. It's not flammable, not explosive, other than the pressurized tank. Thousands of people use nitrous oxide systems every day, it's a cheap, easily removable, easily installed way to make lots of horsepower cheap.

      It works because when compressed, it decomposes into 2N2O -> 2N2 + O2. That extra O2 is a lot more O2 than is available in air by weight (around 20%, I think, but my memory isn't the best). More O2 means you can burn more fuel in a given space, and thus, release more heat and energy in the process. The process whereby the N2O goes from a liquid to gas makes it very cold - expanding volume & dropping pressure - something that increases the resistance to detonation and density of the ambient air charge as well - more O2 again. The presence of additional N2 in the cylinder acts as a buffer against detonation once more.

      Injecting liquid oxygen into your engine would be very stupid. The odds of igniting the metal in the block would be very good, me thinks.

      --
      ..don't panic
    14. Re:Forget efficiency go with NOS by Gordonjcp · · Score: 1

      Uhhh... no. The forced induction system *does* push more fuel and air into the cylinders, but in doing so it raises the combustion pressure. So for a given *mass* of air/fuel mixture, you're burning it at a higher temperature and pressure, which is rather more efficient.

    15. Re:Forget efficiency go with NOS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your American corn is grown using copious amounts of oil, irrigation water, and government subsidies, so I don't think you want to go wasting it on making fuel.

      In fact, corn ethanol only contains about 37% more energy than the petroleum products used to grow the corn in the first place. Hardly an efficient fuel.

      (Sorry -- I don't want this to sound like an anti-American rant. However, the above statement is only true of corn grown in the USA, so I guess I'm stuck with telling it like it is.)

    16. Re:Forget efficiency go with NOS by ch-chuck · · Score: 1

      Gas guzzlers <snip> have helped to further create our dependence on countries like Iraq.

      At least part of the blame for foreign turmoil dependancy lies with the irrational US enviros and greens who won't permit US oil use (i.e., Alaska, offshore, etc). Also see France's nukes for a good example of not being dependant on foreigners energy, with all the inevitable politics and military threats when it goes sour.

      --
      try { do() || do_not(); } catch (JediException err) { yoda(err); }
    17. Re:Forget efficiency go with NOS by Idarubicin · · Score: 1
      However, if you combined the two.. Imagine the possibilities.

      Yes, I'm imagining the possibilities now.

      I imagine possibilities in trees, on my neighbour's lawn, out in the street, and little bits of possibilities raining down on the Walmart parking lot around the corner.

      A tank of fuel and a tank of oxidizer in my car. Um. Isn't that the sort of thing one might find aboard, say, a rocket? Why don't we see what we can do with liquid hydrogen and oxygen? It works for the Space Shuttle--mostly.

      --
      ~Idarubicin
    18. Re:Forget efficiency go with NOS by Thag · · Score: 1

      Actually, hydrogen is typically produced FROM gasoline, because it's much cheaper than electrolysis.

      Enjoy your crack pipe.

      Jon Acheson

      --
      All opinions expressed herein are my own, and not those of my employers, who are appalled.
    19. Re:Forget efficiency go with NOS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Injecting liquid oxygen into your engine would be very stupid. The odds of igniting the metal in the block would be very good, me thinks.

      I hope he doesn't have magnesium cylinder heads!

    20. Re:Forget efficiency go with NOS by DuckDuckBOOM! · · Score: 2, Funny

      Imagine a Beowolf clus. . .never mind.

      --
      Life is like surrealism: if you have to have it explained to you, you can't afford it.
    21. Re:Forget efficiency go with NOS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Damn, what is that link that goes to the lady in the tub? Your comments sir are worthy of a goat sex link.

      Yes let's cap on the French, and destroy the Alaska wilderness... I am with you brother.

      What is that link? It is so appropriate for you motherfuckers.

    22. Re:Forget efficiency go with NOS by j3110 · · Score: 1

      Oh please, I'm tired of responding to idiot trolls already tonight.

      Just because it is, doesn't make that the easiest way. It's only cheaper now(if by any significant ammount) because we rape some small country for it.

      Try to argue it's cheaper in Europe to make Hydrogen from gasoline than other means.

      The proper research has only recently been started for the most efficient way to make Hydrogen. Some include using lenses from space to hit ocean water. Wouldn't it be great if all the ocean could be used to mine Hydrogen like that? Much more plentiful than oil I would say.

      Don't condemn it before the research is done. It's not like we started out with the best gasoline.

      --
      Karma Clown
    23. Re:Forget efficiency go with NOS by juhaz · · Score: 1

      I drive a car because I want to get from point A to point B.

      Drive a fricking jet aircraft or a tank if you want your daily virtual penis enlargement, but don't expect it from every other people, all of us do not have a superiority complex, you know.

    24. Re:Forget efficiency go with NOS by Courageous · · Score: 1

      Uhhh... no. Turbos and blowers (superchargers to all you washed masses) put more air into the cylinder. While this may increase fuel economy and power slightly (due to a more complete burn), to get the most out of a forced induction system, you need to put more fuel in.
      ------
      Actually, I knew this; however, I was under the impression that the additional PSI per se inreased efficiency notably. Not so?

      C//

  3. Hydro boost from water vapor? by Mipmap · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I heard that jet engines actually utilize (i.e. burn) the hydrogen in water vapor that comes through the intake. Any aviation experts out there care to confirm?

    I also heard cars get a little horsepower boost from intake of highly humidified air?

    Experts, please confirm or deny.

    1. Re:Hydro boost from water vapor? by Dark+Bard · · Score: 4, Informative

      I think you are talking about water injection. It's been done since at least WWII. They use to use it on I believe Mustangs for added horse power. It isn't the hydrogen burning it's the fact water steam expands at a higher rate than gas vapors. There have been a few systems for cars. The downside is it tends to over heat the engine. I WWII they just used it briefly as an emergency measure. I don't believe there was any improvement in mileage or polution, just horsepower.

    2. Re:Hydro boost from water vapor? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      As a private pilot I can tell you that, for your typical piston engine aircraft, engine performance is reduced on humid days.

      More moisture = less air available in the same volume.

      However, I can also tell you that the difference, at least low altitudes is negligible.

    3. Re:Hydro boost from water vapor? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Water vapor increases the average density of the "air" in the cylinder, and when heated the water vapor expands more than the standard gasses in the mix.

      Since the burn is never 100% efficient anyway, having some of the volume taken up with H2O vapor doesn't decrease efficiency as quickly as the H2O expansion qualities increase efficiency, until you're talking about really wet vapors. "Water Injection" systems were used on fighter planes during WW2, for instance, this is not new science.

      A.C.-

    4. Re:Hydro boost from water vapor? by strider3700 · · Score: 2, Informative

      You can get a minor boost in power from water injection. This happens in 2 ways. 1 the water cools the intake air, and cooler air is more dense giving you more power. The other way I've heard is the high heat splits the water and then the two parts burn. What water injection is really good for is it helps prevent detonation in high boost engines, and your pistons get a nice steam cleaning every cycle. Power gains are usually not worth mentioning 1-2% at best.

    5. Re:Hydro boost from water vapor? by davidstrauss · · Score: 1
      heard that jet engines actually utilize (i.e. burn) the hydrogen in water vapor that comes through the intake.

      It is unlikely, at least for cars. I assume you mean pure (if ionized) hydrogen that is not combined with oxygen. It is extremely rare for water to ionize on its own, and breaking the bond forcibly requires very large amounts of energy per atom. If you look at chemical reactions (esp. combustion) you see water is a common product because of its high bond energy. Also consider that unfiltered outdoor air should not enter the portions of the engine block responsible for combustion, which precludes its use as a performance enchancer for the combustion process. Water vapor can, however, cool the radiator slightly more due to its high (4.184 K/mol) thermal capacity. Ask any person with a water-cooled (vs. air cooled) PC.

    6. Re:Hydro boost from water vapor? by i.r.id10t · · Score: 1
      I also heard cars get a little horsepower boost from intake of highly humidified air?


      IANAM (I am not a mechanic), butI know that certain humidity/temperature conditions can affect engines and performace due to changing the way the gas burns, which affects optimal timing, which affects... etc. Some controller chips do the sensing and can adjust as needed (anti-knock sensors,02, etc), but some days with just the right conditions, it can make that little difference. That's part of the reason the Gatornationals drag races are so big - here in N. Florida this time of year we tend to have those perfect conditions more often. Check the NHRA speed records, and see where the big milestone 300mph run was at.

      --
      Don't blame me, I voted for Kodos
    7. Re:Hydro boost from water vapor? by magickalhack · · Score: 1

      Allow me to debunk this rediculous conjecture that the water molecule splits and then burns. Anyone proposing this obviously doesn't remember (or never took) high school chemistry. When Hydrogen (H2) burns, it combines with oxygen (O2) to form water, thus releasing energy. It goes like this:
      2xH2 + O2 => 2xH2O

      Reversing that process takes at least as much energy, if not moreso, due to energy conservation. You would not gain any energy by splitting water molecules and then reforming them, you would loose it.

      --
      This Sig Kills Fascists
    8. Re:Hydro boost from water vapor? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can not "burn" the hydrogen in water because that would be analogous to a perpetual engine. The energy required to split water (H2O) into its constituents is exactly equal to the energy released when the constituents recombines. Now, if you could somehow find a lower energy state for H2 and O2 to combine than H2O, then maybe you could gain more energy by moving H2O to that state. I think the explanation of increase air density is more plausible.

    9. Re:Hydro boost from water vapor? by MechaStreisand · · Score: 2, Informative

      That's not how it works. Water injection by itself doesn't add any power at all, but rather acts to prevent detonation (you know, pinging). Most fighter engines in World War II had variable-speed superchargers, but they couldn't use max boost below the critical altitude because it would cause detonation. The Americans used a water injection system that could be used in emergencies to prevent that and allow a higher boost setting to be used, increasing power. The Germans used MW-50, a 50/50 mix of water and methanol which served the same purpose and may have been more effective at it; I don't remember.

      --
      Disclaimer: IANAL. This post is, however, legal advice, and creates an attorney-client relationship.
    10. Re:Hydro boost from water vapor? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While I agree it seems rather rediculous, your reason isn't it. Internal combustion engines are very ineffecient and most of the energy of gasoline is converted to heat. This heat, as it is proposed earlier, is what breaks the hydrogen from the oxygen. Energy is conserved, it's just transferred from thermal engergy into chemical energy.

    11. Re:Hydro boost from water vapor? by magickalhack · · Score: 1

      Yeah, and then back to thermal energy? Did you even read what I was replying to? Didn't think so.

      --
      This Sig Kills Fascists
    12. Re:Hydro boost from water vapor? by Dark+Bard · · Score: 1

      Then the info I had was bad. I have read this several times before but I'm not into engines personally. I had always heard that it was injected into the cylinders after combustion to increase the expansion rate. Like I say bad information.

    13. Re:Hydro boost from water vapor? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      two effects:

      1.) cooling of air -> higher compression possible with same fuel
      2.) expansion of water -> steam

      no burning involved

    14. Re:Hydro boost from water vapor? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Water in the vapor form can inhibit knock (pre-ignition), this allows one to advance the timing and gain more power.
      ab_iron

  4. Why fuel cells are expensive. by barureddy · · Score: 5, Informative

    Most fuel cells that will be used in cars will be PEM (proton exchange membrane) fuel cells. The problem with PEM fuel cells is that it requires a platinum catalyst to remove the electron from the hydrogen aton. As we know platinum is one of the most expensive elements on earth. The key is to find a catalyst that is cheaper and just as noble as platinum. There are other hydrogen fuel cells out there, but they usually operate at high temperatures (the main advantage of PEM). It is not like you want to wait 5 minutes for your car to warm up before you leave.

    1. Re:Why fuel cells are expensive. by MegaHamsterX · · Score: 1

      I know nothing about fuel cells, but I remember something about palladium a while back and how they were figuring out a way to use it in place of platinum.

    2. Re:Why fuel cells are expensive. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Ever heard of batteries?
      Nifty devices, they store energy for quite a long time and you can use the power at any time. Like when you're waiting for the fuel cell to warm up.
      And you know what? You can recharge them with the fuel cell once it's at operating temperature and if you need a quick boost of power, you can combine the outputs of the fuel cell and the battery. And another neat thing, when you dont need 100% of the fuel cell power for driving, you can divert some power to recharge the battery. You can even store the power normally lost as heat during braking in the battery. Amazing..

    3. Re:Why fuel cells are expensive. by ejaw5 · · Score: 0

      You can even store the power normally lost as heat during braking in the battery.

      IIRC, it's not the heat, but Induction caused from braking that charges the battery.

      --

      $cat /dev/random > Sig
    4. Re:Why fuel cells are expensive. by jelle · · Score: 1

      A cool fuel cell is benefitial: Higher temperature means more loss through leaking heat, and means more wear as all chemical reactions speed up, and materials weaken due to the higher temperature.

      The worry I have about batteries is my experience with laptop, cordless, and cell phone batteries: after one year you lost 50-100% of the battery's capacity...

      --
      --- Hindsight is 20/20, but walking backwards is not the answer.
    5. Re:Why fuel cells are expensive. by b!arg · · Score: 1

      Palladium? Micros...

      nah...too easy...

      --

      Everybody dies frustrated and sad and that is beautiful
    6. Re:Why fuel cells are expensive. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      FARKER: Boo Got Shot says,

      ejaw,

      expand "power normally lost as heat" in to "counter work that is done by friction and could be do by induction". I think thats whta IIRC was saying.

    7. Re:Why fuel cells are expensive. by Surak · · Score: 1

      The worry I have about batteries is my experience with laptop, cordless, and cell phone batteries: after one year you lost 50-100% of the battery's capacity...

      You mean like the one in your car?

      (Yeah, that was a rhetorical question)

    8. Re:Why fuel cells are expensive. by saifatlast · · Score: 1

      Don't diesel users have to wait for their sparks to heat up? And the Indian guy said he gets 60 mpg. I sense a theme here, American's are impatient. We want a rediculously powerful hydrogen vehicle that gets horrible fuel mileage, and we want it now!!

      --
      note: i'm known as plugwash most places but i screwd up registering that here somehow in the past and now can't regist
    9. Re:Why fuel cells are expensive. by Zirnike · · Score: 1

      Palladium was more expensive than platinum when we were looking at it for coating parts.

      --
      I'm not shy, I'm stalking my prey
    10. Re:Why fuel cells are expensive. by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      Actually, diesel only really has to warm up if the temperature is fairly low. And it's not the "sparks" that need to heat up... since there are no spark plugs in a diesel engine. The combustion is triggered purely by compression of air... Air is compressed inside the cylinder, and then diesel is injected into it. The heat from compression of the air causes the diesel to ignite. BUT, this means that the air in the cylinder must be warm enough to begin with to generate enough heat for the combustion process to occur. Hence having to warm the cylinders when it's cold (which makes diesels fun in the frigid Canadian winters up here :).

    11. Re:Why fuel cells are expensive. by smithmc · · Score: 1

      There are other hydrogen fuel cells out there, but they usually operate at high temperatures (the main advantage of PEM). It is not like you want to wait 5 minutes for your car to warm up before you leave.

      No thanks, I'm late enough for work in the morning as it is. That's five more minutes I can't sleep.

      --
      Downmodding is the refuge of the weak. Don't downmod, make a better argument!
    12. Re:Why fuel cells are expensive. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      As we know platinum is one of the most expensive elements on earth. The key is to find a catalyst that is cheaper and just as noble as platinum.
      Yo yo dog u muuuuuuuuuust be trippin' How the fizzle am i gonna pimp my mad hoes without no plizatinum? Homie, you gotta know that all the real playas ride on platinum n ice, bling bling ya heard???
  5. ATTN those posting about fuel cells: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This story is not about hydrogen based fuel cells. Fuel cells power cars with electricity the article is talking about adding H to the combustion engine (like NOS).

    1. Re:ATTN those posting about fuel cells: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      heh um never mind I was wrong. Sure you can add a little hydro boost but the problem with fuel cells is that they are fucking big and heavy (and believe it or not H is a lot more expensive than petro per the amount of energy you can get from it). I seriously doubt this is cost effective.

    2. Re:ATTN those posting about fuel cells: by DaChesserCat · · Score: 5, Informative
      It's a known fact that you can run an Internal Combustion Engine on hydrogen gas.

      The person to go looking for on this one is Roger Billings; he's currently with the International Academy of Science (I drive by there every morning on my way to work). He was driving hydrogen-powered ICE vehicles back in the '70's.

      He ran into two problems with running an engine on Hydrogen.
      • Backfiring; he details how, on his first attempt to power a lawn-mower engine on hydrogen gas (he was in his teens) he nearly blew himself and his brother up when the engine backfired. He later overcame the problem (years later) with a water injection system which kept the intake air cool enough that the ultra-volatile hydrogen wouldn't ignite before the spark plug fired
      • NOx emissions; basically, when the temperature in the combustion chamber gets above 700F, you get more Nitric Oxides building up (NItrogen and Oxygen in the air bonding together), and hydrogen can EASILY beat that temperature. Again, the water injection system kept the max temp below the level, keeping the NOx emissions down.

      He got hydrogen engines down to such an artform that he modified a Volkswagen Beetle ('72, IIRC) to run on the stuff for a college competition (he was an undergrad at the time), and the emissions coming out of the tailpipe were actually CLEANER than the air going into the intake. Basically, any Carbon Monoxide or unburned Hydrocarbons (common vehicle pollutants) which made it into the intake were finished off in the process, and the hydrogen fuel didn't produce any such emissions (water vapor).

      I'd be wary about adding hydrogen to a gasoline engine to help the economy. You'd need a significant amount of hydrogen to make any real difference, and hydrogen storage these days is either:
      • high-pressure gas (expensive, heavy tanks and very little capacity)
      • liquid hydrogen (cryogenic materials, with associated hazards)
      • metal hydride (the safest of the bunch, but still very expensive for significant amounts of storage)

      Sorry guys, but this sounds like B.S.
      --
      ... by the Dew of Mountains the thoughts acquire speed, the hands acquire shakes, the shakes become a warning
    3. Re:ATTN those posting about fuel cells: by TheNetAvenger · · Score: 1

      Humboldt University has successfully found a way to produce Hydrogen Fuel cells using only Solar Energy and Water. It doesn't get much cheaper than Sunlight and Water. So the current cost comparison you refer to is dated.

    4. Re:ATTN those posting about fuel cells: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      "# high-pressure gas (expensive, heavy tanks and very little capacity)"

      They aren't really heavy any more. They are made out of composite materials, with pressures up to 700bar (10000psi).

    5. Re:ATTN those posting about fuel cells: by cr0sh · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Yeah - I know. Thank you for posting this info, I was actually thinking about making a modified trimmer engine after reading about this stuff. Your post will probably help save me some trouble (as well as possibly keep me from killing myself from a backfire). Interesting that water injection is the thing here. I will definitely have to look into it deeper before starting such a project.

      You are probably right about the amount needed for increasing the efficiency - still, it would be a fun thing to play with (one of those weekend time projects) - my only main concern is avoiding hydrogen gas leakage at the hose joints...

      --
      Reason is the Path to God - Anon
    6. Re:ATTN those posting about fuel cells: by Karch · · Score: 1

      Adding hydrogen to fuel is a valid way to get better fuel economy. One of the postgrads in the Mech Eng Department of the University of Melbourne (Aust) is doing his thesis on it. I couldn't tell you the specifics of what went on, but it had something to do with getting better flame propogation within the cylinder, which made sure all the fuel was burnt. Hence bringing about better fuel economy and more power. Note this experiment was only done on the actual benefits of using hyrodgen as the ignitor with the engine on a dynameter. No research was done in how this would actually be implemented.

    7. Re:ATTN those posting about fuel cells: by DaChesserCat · · Score: 1

      Find his book, "The Hydrogen World View," by Roger E. Billings (ISBN 0963163426). It's autobiographical, an amusing read, and packed with A GREAT DEAL of valuable insight.

      --
      ... by the Dew of Mountains the thoughts acquire speed, the hands acquire shakes, the shakes become a warning
    8. Re:ATTN those posting about fuel cells: by hotair · · Score: 1
      For storing sufficient fuel to power the vehicle, those are the storage methods. I assume they are painful. However, I looked into this a while back.

      The advocates of this idea are claiming that small amounts of hydrogen can have a large impact because somehow the hydrogen interacts with the partially spent hydrocarbons that are re-cycled out of the PVC valve. During this interaction, they claim that the pollutants are reformed into natural gas and then burned.

      Since they are not using the hydrogen as a primary fuel, but as a way of reforming partially spent fuels, the volume they claim to require in small enough that they are generating it via electrolysis from a jar in the engine compartment.

      This leads to some questions: How much water vapor is getting into the system? Is that the real cause of any efficiencies that they are seeing? What is the true composition of the gases coming from the PVC before and after mixing with hydrogen?

      I almost decided to try it out on an old Pinto or something. The main defect of any of this works seems to be that they aren't at all rigorous in their measurements or experiments. The efficiencies they claim are dramatic, but the measurements are anecdotal at best.

  6. Will it work? by gpinzone · · Score: 1

    Does Slashdot think such a system would work? Yeah, that'll solve it once and for all.

  7. slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Holy crap, slashdot has been slashdotted

  8. Probably not a good idea by ishmaelflood · · Score: 5, Informative

    The energy required to break the water up into hydrogen and oxygen will be at least equal to, and in a practical electrolytic cell it will be greater than, the energy you get back by burning the hydrogen later on. Typical electrolytic processes are around 60% efficient, from memory. This energy comes from the battery, which is about 92% efficient, which comes from the alternator, which is about 60% efficient, which is driven by the engine. So I get a loop efficiency of about 30%.

    However, there may be some subtle advantages in adding gaseous hydrogen and oxygen to the fuel mixture. I doubt they would compensate for the efficiencies in the first paragraph.

    You should ignore this post, the oil companies are paying me $$$ to suppress these crazy inventions.

    1. Re:Probably not a good idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well i don't know about this home made "booster" thing from this specific article...

      But fuel cells are actually more enegry efficient than your traditional combustion engine.

      Fuel cells are the future and when the oil starts to run out (we're already getting to the fighting over whats left stage now) the fuel cell vehicles will roll out fast.

      Actually a consumer level hydrogen car has already been introduced in japan.

      Another case of american companies trying to legislate their way into dominance while everyone else innovates...sigh...oh well.

    2. Re:Probably not a good idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We are not talking Cold fusion here, just liquid hydrogen, all you have to do is burn it, not split water

    3. Re:Probably not a good idea by mbmclaur · · Score: 1

      They are not producing hydrogen via electrolysis of water. They're utilizing an air plasma to oxidize some of the fuel before it is combusted. The water inlet/outlet in the plasmatron schematic are for a cooling jacket.

      --
      Butthead: I'm angry at numbers. Beavis: Yeah, there're like too many of 'em.
    4. Re:Probably not a good idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You have to 'split water' to get hydrogen -- There arn't really any hydrogen mines :)

    5. Re:Probably not a good idea by cr0sh · · Score: 2, Interesting

      However, this system isn't meant to replace the gasoline fuel, but to supplement it, to increase mileage and (maybe) horsepower (I am more interested in the former, actually). I know that you can't get the same amount of energy out that you put in, and that electrolysis isn't very efficient (especially in a homebrew system). Now, that isn't the only way to generate hydrogen, either - you can create a lot of hydrogen via a water/aluminium/lye reactor, keep feeding in those ingredients for more hydrogen, and control the input to the intake with a valve...

      --
      Reason is the Path to God - Anon
    6. Re:Probably not a good idea by Shimari · · Score: 1

      I'm guessing you plan to drill your own oil wells and refine the gasoline to run your engine to turn the turn the alternator to charge the battery to run the eletrolytic process to split the water and create the hydrogen to feed your fuel cells. No wonder you seem completely intimidated by hydrogen technology.

      Folks serious about hydrogen START with hydrogen and let somebody else figure out how to make it and deliver it on your doorstep cheaply and efficiently. The only real challenge is to make the electron do some work when the hydrogen reunites with oxygen. And to do it affordably.
      I am convinced that cheap fuel cells are inevitable and will drive the next industrial revolution, as well as the next stock market bubble.

      (The nice thing about letting somebody else make the hydrogen is that "they" can do it with just sunshine and water somewhere where both are cheap and plentiful and efficiency is not an issue and hydrocarbons are frowned upon).

      "never pet a burning dog"

    7. Re:Probably not a good idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Arrrgh. Repeat after me - Hydrogen fuel is not an energy producer. Hydrogen fuel is an energy storage device. It is a replacement for gasoline, not for nuclear power. Gasoline stores energy too. In the case of gas, it stored lots of solar energy for a long time.

      Hydrogen is interesting because it is clean, easy to produce (relatively speaking - we aren't good at making oil from raw materials) and will need to be ready when fossil fuels are no longer viable. Cars need to store more energy then they can create onsite unless they carry nuclear power around.

    8. Re:Probably not a good idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > So I get a loop efficiency of about 30%.

      Yes, if we first generate electricity then use electrolysis to break apart water. However, when we want LOTS of hydrogen, we turn to our good old reliable friend, Nuclear Power. It is possible to construct a nuclear core which directly cracks water molecules, completely omitting the eletrolysis phase, and thusly improving the efficiency.

      All this, of course, is in the future. Right now, most hydrogen is refined from natural gas.

    9. Re:Probably not a good idea by armb · · Score: 1

      > However, there may be some subtle advantages in adding gaseous hydrogen and oxygen to the fuel mixture. I doubt they would compensate for the efficiencies in the first paragraph.

      Possibly he's getting advantages from accidental water injection and the fact that he's trying to electrolyze it is a red herring.

      (I remember years ago reading a review of a water injection device. The testers found real measurable gains in engine power and efficiency.
      Those gains remained once they removed the device and put a blanking plate in its place to cover the hole they had made to fit it - the mounting bolts (also used for the blanking plate) were introducing turbulence in the inlet manifold that happened to improve the fuel air mixing, even though generally you want a smooth inlet path.)

      --
      rant
    10. Re:Probably not a good idea by mpe · · Score: 1

      We are not talking Cold fusion here, just liquid hydrogen, all you have to do is burn it, not split water.

      Where do you get this liquid hydrogen from? Teleport it from Jupiter?

      In order to get liquid hydrogen you need to first extract it from a compound containing hydrogen (e.g. water, hydrocarbons or acids). Then cool it to below it's boiling point.

    11. Re:Probably not a good idea by mpe · · Score: 1

      Hydrogen is interesting because it is clean, easy to produce

      But it isn't an especially easy fuel to handle. Something which is a liquid at regular temperatures is much easier to transport.

      (relatively speaking - we aren't good at making oil from raw materials)

      You don't actually use the oil which comes out of the ground as a fuel. It is refined and processed to make a fuels. It's perfectly possible to use other organic chemicals as fuels. Alcohols and esters are common organic compounds which can easily be derived from biolgical sources. Including waste materials. Methane is produced by rotting garbage...
      We already have infrastructure systems for handling and transporting methane and liquid motor fuels.

    12. Re:Probably not a good idea by mpe · · Score: 1

      However, when we want LOTS of hydrogen, we turn to our good old reliable friend, Nuclear Power. It is possible to construct a nuclear core which directly cracks water molecules, completely omitting the eletrolysis phase, and thusly improving the efficiency.

      Leaving the problem of how to remove tritium...

      All this, of course, is in the future. Right now, most hydrogen is refined from natural gas.

      In other words petro-methane.

    13. Re:Probably not a good idea by vrmlguy · · Score: 1

      Tritium isn't plutonium. It decays relatively quickly. Waiting eight half-lives eliminates over 99.5% of any radioactive material; for tritium that translates into less than a century.

      --
      Nothing for 6-digit uids?
    14. Re:Probably not a good idea by ishmaelflood · · Score: 2, Informative

      At least two of the systems mentioned are electrolytic.

      Quote from main article " The Hydrogen-Boost System is a gas mileage enhancement system based on the main component, an on-board hydrogen gas generator. "

      Quote from third article (the only one I read thoroughly, admittedly ) "There are a few minor drawbacks with the electrolysis unit."

      Both of these systems are injecting hydrogen gas into the airstream upstream from the intake valve. They both sound like charlatans at best.

      The SAE paper is talking about a rather different process. "for onboard generation of hydrogen-rich gas by partial oxidation of a wide range of fuels. These plasmaboosted microreformers are compact, rugged, and provide rapid response. With hydrogen supplement to the main fuel, SI engines can run very lean resulting in a large reduction in emissions from SI engines are possible by operation under lean conditions with the addition of hydrogen. Hydrogen increases flame speed and extends the lean limit of SI engine operation [1]. The combination of enhanced flame speed and wider flammability limits of hydrogen can thus stabilize"

      The basic idea here is that hydrogen has better combustion properties than other fuels, so an admixture of hydrogen can improve the combustion process. Can't argue with that, check papers written under the guidance of Harry Watson in Melbourne, Australia.

      Oh, here's a bit more analysis on the efficiency of elctrolysis

      "I found a plating chart that shows Hydrogen is generated at the rate of 0.0373 gram/ampere-hour, and Oxygen is generated at the rate 0.2984 gram/ampere-hour, assuming 100% electrode efficiency. The 1:8 ratio corresponds to the H2:O weights of water. I.e., H2O will be electrolytically decomposed at the rate of (0.0373 + 0.2984) = 0.3357 grams/ampere-hour.
      http://www.finishing.com/GIFS/ crib.GIF

      Now, for voltage needed. A table of 'The Standard emf Series' shows
      O2 + 4H+ + 4 e- = 2 H2O at +1.229 Volts, and
      2H+ + 2 e- = H2 at 0.000 Volts. Subtracting 2x the 2nd rzn. from the first gives
      O2 + 2H2 = 2 H2O at +1.229 Volts
      However, due to polarization at the electrodes, to get the reaction to go at a reasonable rate requires an overvoltage. In this case, figure an extra 0.5 V at each electrode, for a total driving voltage of -2.229 Volts.

      Now for an overall rate of 1000g H2O decomposed per hour, the current required is 1000/0.3359 = 2977 amp-hours. At 2.229 Volts, the power consumed is 6636 volt-amp-hr = 6.636 Kwatt-hr, or $0.796 worth of electricity at $0.12/Kwatt-hr. ...
      Great stuff. 1 kg of water will electrolyse to give 111 g of H2. This has a calorific value of 142 MJ/kg, so in an 80% efficient fuel cell it will generate 0.111*.8*142*10^6/3600/1000 kWh

      3.5 kWh

      So you are putting in 6.6 kWh of electricity to generate 3.5 kWh of electricity (ie 53% efficient). Not, in most circumstances, a great idea. "

      That particular discussion was concerning using electricity to create hydrogen to run a fuel cell. The numbers there will allow a more accurate estimate of the likely efficiency of the electrolysis based units. Looks like electrolysis is 66% efficient from those figures.

    15. Re:Probably not a good idea by Stephen+Maturin · · Score: 1

      i've tried hydrogen and oxygen to improve my engine performance, but ended up having to get the water cleaned out of my fuel lines!
      Damn cheap gas stations....

      --
      Non tam praeclarum est scire Latine, quam turpe nescire
      -- Cicero
    16. Re:Probably not a good idea by Epistax · · Score: 1

      Well if we get a 30% efficient hydrogen based engine, we beat everything we've got now. Our current heat engines just can't be at all efficient unless under laboratory conditions. I forgot the formula, but the max efficiency for any engine which relies on heat is something like (1 - (maximum heat / minimum heat)) (*100%).

    17. Re:Probably not a good idea by regen · · Score: 1
      Typical electrolytic processes are around 60% efficient, from memory. This energy comes from the battery, which is about 92% efficient, which comes from the alternator, which is about 60% efficient, which is driven by the engine. So I get a loop efficiency of about 30%.

      Why would you electrolyse water in the car? I don't think anyone is seriously proposing a system like this.

      Almost every proposal I've seen, electrolysis of water to produce Hydrogen is performed a large plants with conventional means to produce electricity. Hydrogen would then be shipped to fueling stations, similar to the way gasoline is today. The production of Hydrogen could be done very efficently, the big problem is the distribution of it once it is produced.

    18. Re:Probably not a good idea by Planx_Constant · · Score: 1

      But these are talking about using electricity FROM THE MOTOR to split the water on board the car. So the fact that this is only 30% efficient means that you are just throwing away 70% of the power used in the production of the hydrogen.

      --
      Heisenberg might have been here.
    19. Re:Probably not a good idea by Planx_Constant · · Score: 1

      Why would you electrolyse water in the car?

      You wouldn't. But that's exactly what the 'Hydrogen Boost' website is proposing. And what else do they sell on their website?

      Fuel line magnets.

      Yep. Scam artists.

      The homebuilt guy is proposing the same thing, but he honestly just doesn't seem to understand the second law of thermodynamics.

      --
      Heisenberg might have been here.
    20. Re:Probably not a good idea by mpe · · Score: 1

      Tritium isn't plutonium. It decays relatively quickly [iaea.or.at]. Waiting eight half-lives eliminates over 99.5% of any radioactive material; for tritium that translates into less than a century.

      It's hardly commercially viable to stockpile the stuff for a century though. Whilst beta particles are less damaging to biologicals than alpha particles and the helium threee isn't a problem the resulting free radical is.

    21. Re:Probably not a good idea by juhaz · · Score: 1

      Just sell it to terrorists or some government for a good price. Tritium is quite crucial in building some of the more high-tech nukes.

  9. Mod parent as "Offtopic" by nebbian · · Score: 1

    Think about it for a second: News about the war has already saturated all the major news outlets. You can't get away from the damn thing.

    If you want to comment about the war then for goodness sake do it in the story that's about the war, not in a story about hydrogen. Sheesh!

    1. Re:Mod parent as "Offtopic" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, we need an engine that is powered by bullshit, a very abundant resource, that can even be generated by the driver when necessary.

    2. Re:Mod parent as "Offtopic" by cr0sh · · Score: 1

      Actually, when I posted this article for consideration, the "war" was the last thing I was thinking of - it merely seemed like it could be a good weekend project to try to build, a fun experiment, that might increase gas mileage, thus decreasing the amount of money spent on gas. You are reading waaay to much into the question...

      --
      Reason is the Path to God - Anon
    3. Re:Mod parent as "Offtopic" by nebbian · · Score: 1

      Parent meaning parent comment, not parent story. Check the post I was replying to. It basically says "what are you guys doing reading this story when there's a war on". I was saying it's an article on hydrogen, so keep war comments out of here.

  10. stoicheometric combustion by brad3378 · · Score: 1

    okay, so I can't spell :)

    I'm just curious - how is this technique achieving accurate control of the air/fuel mixture ratio? Can oxygen sensors still accurately determine if the burn is/was lean/rich ?

    --

    1. Re:stoicheometric combustion by glenebob · · Score: 1
      Can oxygen sensors still accurately determine if the burn is/was lean/rich?
      Why not? A small amount of oxygen should mean a slightly lean mixture regardless of what was burned. Sounds somewhat logical anyway...
  11. another story of junk that might work by TheSHAD0W · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I once read a page containing a suspect method for boosting the power of a motor by adding water. I don't remember how I ran across the page, but it was full of rambling by someone who basically had no idea how chemistry works but who had done some experimenting and may have stumbled on something...

    The idea basically involved mixing water and gasoline before feeding it into the engine. A surfactant was used to allow the two to misch, so the engine was never fed pure water. The experimenter also bolted a hunk of platinum to the top of the cylinder, saying the platinum would be a catalyst and would crack the water into hydrogen and oxygen, producing more energy.

    Pretty funny, huh?

    Well, maybe not. I sent him a letter with an alternative theory; that the added water absorbed heat and evaporated, trading heat that would otherwise be wasted for additional pressure inside the cylinder. I also postulated that the platinum chunk wasn't taking an active part in the situation, but was instead using up space inside the cylinder and increasing the compression ratio; and that a ratio that would lead to pre-detonation in a pure gasoline engine might not do so in a system that ran at lower temperatures, thanks to the water's cooling effect. I suggested running a few experiments to find out, by measuring operating temperatures with and without the water, and by bolting in a hunk of steel in place of the platinum and seeing if it made a difference. I also recommended he try a dual injection system, one for fuel and one for water, rather than try and mix them.

    I did get an email message back from the page's maintainer, but I've no idea if the experimenter ever got the message. Oh well.

    1. Re:another story of junk that might work by Jordy · · Score: 1

      I've heard that the added water will raise combustion point of the gas and in some cars increase the percentage of fuel that is combusted. Pre-ignition is less likely to happen and the volitility of the gas is reduced requiring a higher temperature to ignite it.

      This is essentially what higher octane fuels at gas stations do except instead of water they use other additives.

      --
      The world is neither black nor white nor good nor evil, only many shades of CowboyNeal.
    2. Re:another story of junk that might work by photon317 · · Score: 2, Interesting


      Using water to boost engine power has been a well-known trick of racers for a long, long time. It is no secret that very small amounts of water vaporized into the air/fuel mixture will increase horsepower. I have heard anecdoctal tales dating back to the 60's and earlier of home-brew systems for drag race cars, very similar to some current strap-on NO2 injection systems, which allowed the driver to apply short controlled bursts of water mist into the intake manifold.

      The primary benefits are in lowering intake mixture temperature, increasing the thermal conductivity of the pre-burn intake mixture and the post-burn exhaust mix, and and most important, increasing the effective compression ratio due to the fact that water is uncompressable. Any drop of water inserted into the cylinder before firing will not compress, and essentially has an effect similar to shaving the heads down to remove the same volume from the cylinder.

      Of course, this is a very dangerous practice. A little too much water will cause all sorts of general failure, up to and including rods and even larger parts to come flying out of your engine block. There's probably also some extra maintenance steps neccesary that get taken care of during normal racing engine maintenance/rebuild to keep an engine subjected to this running safely. In other words, please don't go do this to your Civic because you saw my post here.

      --
      11*43+456^2
    3. Re:another story of junk that might work by canadian_right · · Score: 1

      Water injection is a very old method to allow higher boost on forced induction internal combustion engines. It was used in some WWII era figher planes, and is still used in some high performance engines. Basicly, the water cools the mixture, allowing higher boost without detenation. Try google (water injection power), or water injection

      --
      Anarchists never rule
    4. Re:another story of junk that might work by bluGill · · Score: 1

      Water inject is a known way to improve performance and power. However it only works after the engine is warm, and only when you get the right amount. (More than about 5% water is worse than none at all).

      Combine water's tendency to freeze in winter, with the need to keep another consumable toped off, with a couple other disadvantages that I forget now, and water injection is not worth it.

      Some gas stations (used to?) mix a little water in with their gas, because they know that it is a cheap way to increase octane and power.

    5. Re:another story of junk that might work by cr0sh · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I have heard of this system, too - I think the Platinum thing is bunk, but the rest does work - however, I don't know if it can work in a fuel injected engine or not (it was typically done with carbed engines, and the feed was into the carburetor). Possibly could, but you would have to probably modify the intake manifold after the fuel rail input - not an easy or cheap job...

      --
      Reason is the Path to God - Anon
    6. Re:another story of junk that might work by dpletche · · Score: 1

      I mentioned this same idea to Gharlane of Eddore back in about 1986, after I got my first car. He told me that this very same water-injection technique is used for a short-term power boost in certain aircraft engines. I contemplated making a more rigorous calculation of the thermodynamic efficiency a few years later when I was taking P-Chem, but found that my attention was spread thin by my existing homework.

    7. Re:another story of junk that might work by mpe · · Score: 1

      I once read a page containing a suspect method for boosting the power of a motor by adding water. I don't remember how I ran across the page, but it was full of rambling by someone who basically had no idea how chemistry works but who had done some experimenting and may have stumbled on something...

      Adding water to an internal combustion engine is a very well known technique to increase power. Notably on military aircraft.

    8. Re:another story of junk that might work by JUSTONEMORELATTE · · Score: 1

      In other words, please don't go do this to your Civic because you saw my post here.
      Oh no, please do go do this to your Civic because of a posting on slashdot. Then take pictures of the project (before, during, after, and after the blowout) and post the page on slashdot.
      Bonus points if your windshield washer ports light up.
      As long as I'm offtopic, does a whale-tail spoiler still make you a "ricer" if you put it on a Jetta? If not, what are you?

    9. Re:another story of junk that might work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A nazi?

    10. Re:another story of junk that might work by LordMyren · · Score: 1

      water injection is a valid means of keeping your engine cooler, preventing "pinging" aka engine detonation which is horrendously horrible to your engine.

      some alcohol injection system is also used.

      doesnt make your car faster inherently, but allows it to run faster harder better.

  12. Re:Nothing like CASHING IN by TheNetAvenger · · Score: 1

    Cocksucking is Anti-American? Since when?

  13. what is up with the god link by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    am i the only person who noticed the god link at the bottom of the page?? what is up with that? god doesn't belong with science... and reading what is on that link and how it is used with there site, i realize that i would never buy anthing from them ... EVER ... and that isn't a quote from the bible. -=gabe2=-

  14. Problem with hydrogen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the problem with hydrogen is that when you burn it you make water. Eventually that water is going to build and mix with the oil up around the pistons and gum everything up causing some major problems. Besides that, I'm not really a gearhead but I do know that having water in your gas is bad.

  15. MODS TO THE RESCUE by BoojiBoy0 · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    MODS! Please take care of all these posts that think this has something to do with hydrogen fuel cells. Then please take care of this one too.

    --
    I know the secrets of the video game champs
  16. Could this avoid future wars ?? by indiancowboy · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Well, if such hydrogen fuel cells could be the answer to america's SUV needs... then could this cure Bush's Mad-Cowboy disease? Else who knows? today its Iraq tomorrow another oil-rich country. May these alternative fuel-cells be developed soon the delay is shedding blood!

  17. Oh no! by The+Bringer · · Score: 1

    First office sized message delivery hindenbergs, and now 4-wheeled hindenbergs?! No good will come of this! No good at all!

    1. Re:Oh no! by shplorb · · Score: 1

      I presume you are joking, but:

      The Hindeenburg went down not because Hydrogen is as unstable as everyone says it is, but because the thing was doped with rocket fuel! Combined with certain atmospheric conditions resulting in a large static charge and improper grounding, you had the recipe for disaster.

      If it wasn't for that rocket fuel doping, perhaps we might have a Hydrogen economy today.

    2. Re:Oh no! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The office sized one used Helium... very inert.

  18. Expensive? =/ by Mattsson · · Score: 1

    Is gasoline expensive in the US?
    I thought it was dirt cheap there!
    You should try paying around $3.7/gallon, like we do in sweden...
    And this has nothing to do with the US war threats. It's been like this for years...
    Once the US invasion of Iraq is underway, the price'll probably skyrocket. :/
    Luckily, I drive a diesel. That's "only" about $3.2/gallon. =)

    --
    /.Mattsson - My native language is not English, so please don't whine over linguistic errors. (That's lame anyway...)
    1. Re:Expensive? =/ by buck_wild · · Score: 1

      One would think that your Volvos would get better gas mileage, then.

      That being said, I understand that people in the US commute more and longer than their European couterparts. I, for example, commute more than 40 miles one way to work five days a week. Aside from some of the large metropolitan areas, mass transit is generally not an option for many in the US.

      --
      If all you have is a hammer, everything looks like a nail.
  19. Re:Nothing like CASHING IN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well it's anti-American since France invented it.

  20. millage master ignition system by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Has anybody tried Jacob's products?

    Their advertising seems good. Even the magazine reviews. But I've never met anybody who has tried one.

  21. Hydrogen = best stuff to burn. by silverhalide · · Score: 1
    A Hydrogren internal combustion engine would be great. In fact, many auto makers have prototype cars that run their engines off of hydrogen alone: such as this site explains. Still, a normal engine will NOT work correctly with significant amounts of hydrogden being burned, as it changes the mixture too much, requires a different amount of compression, might not work with the injectors properly, won't get contained by the current fuel system, and so on. Bascially, because hydrogen burns so easily, it requires a much different timing.

    For a real life way to make your car run a little cleaner (Albeit with some LESS power, since ethanol has a lower energy density than gas), add ethanol to your gas tank. Many newer cars now support ethanol in the gas mix (they detect how much alcohol is present in the gasoline) and adjust the engine accordingly. I know the production Ford Ranger 3.0L has this right now, and I'm sure some other cars do too.

    1. Re:Hydrogen = best stuff to burn. by cr0sh · · Score: 1

      Yeah - the Ranger (and used to be the Taurus as well) could use E-85 without mods. However, that engine isn't a fuel-injected engine - I have the 2.3L FI engine on my 4-banger Ranger (94), and I can't use E-85 (probably will melt the injectors or something). I researched it after finding out about the 3.0L engine. As far as burning hydrogen, I am not interested in replacing the fuel system, but rather augmenting it (by dumping the hydrogen into the air-intake manifold, most likely via a vacuum line tee off the PCV valve) - still, it may be that you require a lot of hydrogen to have any effect, and even then it may or may not work...

      --
      Reason is the Path to God - Anon
    2. Re:Hydrogen = best stuff to burn. by mark_lybarger · · Score: 1

      yeah, our Dodge Caravan has a flex fuel system which lets it take E85/Gasoline or any mixture. the vehicle has probably never had much E85 in it and probably never will though. here in these parts of Ohio (Columbus), there's only one station that carries E85. We haven't been to that side of town since we bought the vehicle months ago to see what pricing is for the E85 but i hear that it's more expensieve per gallon and gets worse mileage. kinda makes me not so interested in using it as a fuel source...

    3. Re:Hydrogen = best stuff to burn. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      hydrogen burns at nearly the same rate that gas does so you would not be a need to change the compression ratio or the stroke of the eng. the only things that would need to be changed would be the fuel delivery systems
      different injectors and the like.

      There are already many hydrogen and propane conversion kits for popular GM V8s
      And BMW as already produced a hydrogen powered car using a stock 5 series and changing the fuel delivery systems and no other changes if you drove it you would be unable to tell the difference between it and a normal 5 series other than the gas gage reads PSI instead of gal.

      Also I don't see what all the hoopla is about the hybrids
      VW makes a diesel golf and beetle that gets 52 on the highway
      Besides my 2001 Saturn SL gets 41 on the highway and better than 35 in the city

    4. Re:Hydrogen = best stuff to burn. by mrv · · Score: 1

      Also I don't see what all the hoopla is about the hybrids
      VW makes a diesel golf and beetle that gets 52 on the highway
      Besides my 2001 Saturn SL gets 41 on the highway and better than 35 in the city</i>

      It's not just about the mileage (although that is a big part of it). It's also about the emissions. A VW TDI (manual transmission) may get in the high 40s for MPG, but all the NOx and particulate matter gives it a really low score for smog-producing compounds. The Toyota Prius (CVT) is SULEV, the Honda Civic HEV is ULEV (manual) or SULEV (CVT), and they're both in the high 40s+ for MPG. (The CVT Honda Insight has about the same MPG, and is SULEV. The manual Insight gets 60+ MPG and is ULEV.)

      Check out http://www.epa.gov/greenvehicles/ to see just how your vehicle ranks for both greenhouse gasses (directly proportional to MPG) AND also smog emissions.

      --
      -mrv
  22. Well, it is getting more expensive for America... by cr0sh · · Score: 1

    I realize that gas in Europe and most elsewhere is *much* more expensive than US gas, and that we are nowhere near those prices yet. Still, with our economy the way it is, any way to increase the efficient use of the gas we do use would be a benefit for our pocketbooks...

    --
    Reason is the Path to God - Anon
  23. Hydro Boost? by JWSmythe · · Score: 1

    Well, everything I've ever heard or read about trying electrolysis can't produce enough hydrogen to fuel a car. Breaking down water into hydrogen and oxygen and feeding just won't cut it. If it could, a more robust system should be able to power the car by itself.

    The theory does sound interesting though. I'm curious myself if it would work.

    After reading his text, I have to wonder about the author though. He says he has a background in chemestry (at least teaching it in hgih school), but then failed to do any sort of consistant tests. He used his fuel gauge to measure the fuel usage? Gauges are rarely accurate. You're using a linear measure in a irregularly shaped tank. I've had the luxury of testing this on many road trips. I'd watch milages roll by and the gas guage would drop slowly at the beginning, implying a very good fuel economy. But when we get to the bottom of the tank the needle drops fast.

    Anyone who owns a late model F-Body car (Firebird or Camaro) knows this. One friend lives by the rule of, if his car reads 1/4 tank, find a gas station. If I remember right, 1/4 means you have about 3 gallons in the tank, on a 16 gallon tank.

    He honestly should have been at least stopping at gas stations, filling the tank, and measuring his milage. Not 100% accurate, but much better than reading the gauge.

    The links he has on the bottom of the page scare me. I knew someone who absolutely lived by the concepts of doing all the witchcraft mechanics for power. He also calculated his car had 500hp based on add-on parts and their advertised increase percentages. hehe.

    With all that said, some time I have lots of spare time on my hands, and an urge to put several hundred miles on my car, I'll try out his concept. I'd love to say that I've increased my horsepower by x%, and fuel economy by x mpg.. More than likely I'll say "that was interesting.", and pull all the crap off.

    --
    Serious? Seriousness is well above my pay grade.
    1. Re:Hydro Boost? by cr0sh · · Score: 1
      More than likely I'll say "that was interesting.", and pull all the crap off.

      Pretty much what I was thinking - it is an interesting "weekend" experiment, that doesn't cost much in materials or time - if it seemed to work, great (and I would be doing what you suggest, to get a better idea of mpg) - if not, then I would pull it off, and call it a failed (but interesting) experiment (actually, I would probably play around with filling balloons and such using it, maybe experimenting with other hydrogen systems)...

      --
      Reason is the Path to God - Anon
    2. Re:Hydro Boost? by JWSmythe · · Score: 1


      Hey Bob, watch what happens when I put a match to this balloon!

      hehe

      --
      Serious? Seriousness is well above my pay grade.
  24. That'll go down like a lead Zeppelin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Anyone remember the Hindenberg?

    1. Re:That'll go down like a lead Zeppelin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What does this have to do with using hydrogen in cars? Are they going to paint the cars with aluminum paint that catches on fire?

    2. Re:That'll go down like a lead Zeppelin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ignorant bastard.

  25. Hydrogen as a fuel suppliment - VERY old news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    The DOE did a significant amount of research into hydrogen as an alternative to fossil fuels in the late 70's and early 80's. This research culminated with an Internal Compustion Engine (ice) in a Buick powered on pure hydrogen. The hydrogen storage tank was a cryogenic liquid H2 system that filled the trunk. They even had a liquid H2 fueling station. The engine in the Buick was basically stock - very little modification was needed. (For you do-it yourselfers - you gotta change your spark advance to basically 0, and replace the vanes in any turbocharger with metal alloys that are not susceptible to hydrogen embritlement - both relatively easy). This DOE program was a great success. The Buick worked like a charm, was easy to refill, and very safe. The liquid H2 tank could be filled and left un-used for two weeks before any fuel would vent off, and any venting was converted to steam by a simple catalyst. Also, this Buick experienced a roll-over accident (un-planned) and suffered no great explosion or 'Hindenburg' disaster (no liquid oxygen around).

    The DOE's conclusion? Sure, H2 can be used to replace fossil fuels. Even easier, use H2 to augment the combustion in a dual fuel vehicle. This has been done for decades in diesel engines, where as much as 80% of the fuel can come from something like hydrogen, propane or natural gas. Duel fuel gasoline engines (spark ignition) are rather problematic at best. Even though its possible and quite easy - its STILL not practicle for the same reasons today - we have no H2 distribution system, and replacing our fossil fuel based distribution system would take decades and cost trillions upon trillions. This is clearly something that must be done in an evolutionary effort, rather than an evolutionary one.

    Dual fuel diesel engines are the focus of Europes hydrogen initiative, as I read on www.iht.com a week or so ago. This makes alot more sense then the rather far-out science project of a pure hydrogen economy and fuel cells. A good dual fuel design will allow operation on primarily H2, or just diesel, depending on whats available.

    And a final note, storing hydrogen for portable use is a real pain. One could carry around a significant amount of metal hydrides to adsorb the H2, or one could store the hydrogen in a hydride chemical soup. Both approaches are problematic: massive amounts of energy are wasted in transporting hundreds or thousands of pounds of storage medium, and having to both fuel up your car, as well as drain out the byproduct would double the necessary fueling system infrastructure. Neither one is practicle. Fortunately, many engineers have realized a significant amount of engineering has already been done on this exact issue by NASA, and quite successfully, to power the first vehicle that ever made it to space - the X-15. Anhydrous ammonia is a wonderful portable energy carrier, and is also quite safe (compared to gasoline!).

    Enough rambling for now. Oh, except to say that just injecting water vapor into the intake of an engine will give measurable efficiency gains. Go google 'water injection'. These goofbals claiming the gains come from hydrogen via on-board electrolysis are not firing on all cyclinders...

    1. Re:Hydrogen as a fuel suppliment - VERY old news by buck_wild · · Score: 1

      Very nice post.

      One nitpick: The author's question was not about Hydrogen fuel-cells, or going with hydrogen entirely, but about adding hydrogen to the mix somehow and if it was feasible to do so.

      --
      If all you have is a hammer, everything looks like a nail.
  26. Re:Well, it is getting more expensive for America. by Mattsson · · Score: 1

    Of course...
    And any such innovation would lower my gas bill too. =)

    --
    /.Mattsson - My native language is not English, so please don't whine over linguistic errors. (That's lame anyway...)
  27. If they did it once, they can do it again... by jxliv7 · · Score: 1

    I had an '85 Nissan Sentra diesel, 1.7 liter, no A/C. I got 45 to 50 miles to the gallon of cheaper (!) diesel fuel. On the open roads, it was at least 55 miles to the gallon at highway speeds of 65 to 75. Top speed was almost 100 mph (but don't tell anybody)...

    My question is, why don't they build'em that way anymore...?

    1. Re:If they did it once, they can do it again... by panurge · · Score: 1

      Buy a VW. The VW 1.9 litre turbo engine turns out between 100 and 150 horsepower depending on variant. The technology is basically that used on large marine Diesel engines, the most efficient you can get. 50-60 mp (US) gallon is achievable on highways. But don't believe the wilder claims of people who had Diesels in the early 80s. Believe me, I was working on Diesel R&D then, and the engines were nowhere near as good, or efficient, as we have now.

      --
      Panurge has posted for the last time. Thanks for the positive moderations.
  28. Well by rabtech · · Score: 1

    He seems to be implying that the hyrdogen gas produced by the decomposition of water reacts with gasoline to produce a different type of hydrocarbon, which burns more efficiently.

    However this seems like it would be easy to verify in a lab setting. Combine vaporized gasoline and hyrdogen gas under the pressures experienced in an average engine, and test how well it burns compared to normal gasoline.

    --
    Natural != (nontoxic || beneficial)
    1. Re:Well by cr0sh · · Score: 1

      Very true, and probably the smartest approach - however, I don't have such a lab available, nor the money to fund such an experiment. Maybe it already has been done (the last link seems to indicate something along these lines has been tested and found to be better), and I just have to find the results. What I was thinking of doing was building one, then testing mpg before and after (ie, add a switch to turn it off and on) - plus I would like to know how well it does emission-wise, so I would want to test that as well.

      --
      Reason is the Path to God - Anon
    2. Re:Well by atomicdragon · · Score: 1

      It doesn't necessarily combine with the hydrocarbons in the gasoline. Instead it is supposed to increase the temperature and flame/ignition speed of the gas so that it burns better before being removed from the cylinder.

      If you read another post of mine a ways up, some experimental evidence indicates this doesn't make a difference though.

  29. Re:Hydrogen isn't ready... check out DIESEL by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We hear about 100mpg gas cars. Or the 50mpg hybrid cars. What about the 50mpg VW TDI cars you can buy right now that don't use any fancy new technology? Or the 235mpg VW prototype (page 32) diesel?

    Diesel is easier to manufacture than gas (lower emissions from processing plant, lower costs for consumers) so it is clearly the better fuel. Maybe with this stupid war we'll see more diesel vehicles sold.

    Check out that last article. We need to to focus on Diesel which can help us here and now instead of hydrogen/solar power which are decades off.

  30. look... the truth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I am a automobile enthusiest and have studied the combustion proccess and know how alternative fuels work..
    THis site is complete BS, a complete and total ripoff artist, and its so painfully obvious that I don't even know why it is here.

    Look.. Basicly gasolene is sprayed into the air, either thru high pressure nozzles (fuel injection), or thru a venturi and is sucked into the air thru carefully calibrated holes (carbirator) it is the same principle as putting a straw in soda or water and blowing across the top (perpidinculare) of the straw.. the suction you create by the rapidly moving air will pull the water up the straw and into the air stream..
    The mixture of air and gass is the real "fuel" not the gasolene itself. The air holes in the carb and the computer in the new car both are designed to keep fuel mixture the correct gas/air ratio for most efficient burning.

    There are some very bad things about gasolene that designers or cars have to overcome.

    1. you are atomizing a liquid into a air stream. Any time the air stream would slow down or the gass would particulize and being to puddle in the intake tubes. Carbirators had a heated plate underneth them to combat this, the fuel would puddle, but it evaperate immediately, and fuel injection (modern designs) inject the fuel at the last possible moment before it enters the combustion chamber.

    2. Gasolene is very inefficent medium to burn. It realy only has 15% efficiency, the rest is wasted in heat and friction in the engines mechanical parts... LPG (propane) is a wonderfully efficient power source runs about 85-90% efficiency, but you get worse milage if you run it. WHy? Because there is more energy in 15% of gallon of gass than the 85% of the a gallon of LPG. Another thing is that LPG burns hotter, being a gas and then the Gasolene whos liquid form absorbse heat radiating from the combustion chamber and burns cooler.

    Now in order to accerate a 3000 pound car from 0 to 60 miles per hour, IT TAKES THE SAME AMOUNT OF ENERGY IRREGARDLESS OF ENGINE. Whether it's a 1950's V8 or a honda's 2003 4 banger it doesn't matter. However you can increase the efficiency of a motor to the point were you can save gas, because more of the energy is directed at acceleration then is wasted, so the Honda will win out because it is more efficient.

    Want to hear something funny? WHat are the most "efficient" (in terms of percent of fuel energy directed towards horsepower and torque). Amercan dragsters, running heavily modified hemi big displacement v8's (500+ CID or 8 liters and above displacement)!! Cars makers have a magic ratio of gasolene to energy produced and this is expressed in terms of percentages. A old inline 6 from the 60's would be about 50-60 percent, Smog-proof motors from around the 80's would be about 45-60 percent, a modern truck v8 would be about 75-80 percent, a hotrodded v8 with a loud exast (if hotrodded correctly) would get about 85-95%, and a modern v-tec honda would get about 90%... A race car motor can get upwards to 100-115% percent, due to fuel air/gas mixture "tricks".

    Now what about adding water to make it more efficient? Nope... They'll use water injection in Turbo cars to cool the combustion chamber down to avoid detonation, Plus when they spray the air into the hot air stream it'll cool the air down as the water evaparates and that will help because cool are has more mass than hot air. The more mass of air, the more gas you can add to it, the more power.

    Adding hydrogen, could increase the efficiency of the burning proccess, BUT YOU SEE IT TAKES ENERGY TO CREATE HYDROGEN, SO YOU WOULD BE TAKING ENEGRY FROM THE CAR TO GIVE BACK TO THE CAR... its complete bullshit. The the hydrogen "generator" is a fake were does the electricy come from? It's almost a laughable as the 75 mpg carbirator or fuel line magnets.. ITS ALL BULLSHIT. You know people build there own motors all the time, Hell I want to build my own car, if this was possible don't you think engineers, hotrodders, racers around the world wo

  31. can't get away from it? ?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What... you can't do something other than watch
    tv or listen to commercial radio?

    The headline on slashdot was the first I heard about
    the attack.

    Spare us your drama.

  32. Actually tried this in the '70s by Colonel+Panic · · Score: 1

    Back in the mid to late 70's my dad had a Fiat sedan and being tinkerers (more people tinkered on their cars then it seems, and if you had a Fiat you pretty much always had to tinker with it :) we tried some of the water-vapor injection ideas that were around then (supposed to give a 10% boost in milage) - but it didn't really work. Then we got the idea: what if we electrolyzed the water into hydrogen & oxygen and sent the gases into the carburator. We tried it out, it's pretty easy to do (though I'm not sure how you'd do it on a fuel injected car - I suppose you'd pump it into the air intake as shown on the diagram on one of those sites)... Well, our results were pretty inconclusive. We were gonna experiment with some other ideas related to this, but that's about the time I went off to college.

  33. Alternative fuels are very sexy, but... by bzipitidoo · · Score: 2, Interesting
    How about looking at other ideas out there that are less radical and a whole lot more practical? I've been waiting for the 42V electrical system ever since the standard was hashed out way back in '95.

    Changing from 12V to 42V will be a lot easier than moving from gasoline to something else. Look what you get for going to 42V:

    • Integrated alternator/starter/flywheel. Instant warm starts-- no more idling while stopped.
    • Solenoid actuated valves. No more camshaft optimized for only a small range of RPMs. No more horrible timing belt.
    • Hermetic A/C. Magnet will be strong enough that direct mechanical connection from pulley with leak prone seals no longer needed.
    • Electric power steering. No more pump and fluid.
    • Smaller wires

    That's a lot of weight removed and fuel saved. And it's all so much more attainable and immediate than fuel cells with PEM conversion or changing to pressurized tanks of hydrogen. Don't get me wrong, good practical stuff comes out of alternative fuel research. But let's not focus on pie in the sky to the exclusion of all else.

    --
    Intellectual Property is a monopolistic, selfish, and defective concept. It is "tyranny over the mind of man"
    1. Re:Alternative fuels are very sexy, but... by realdpk · · Score: 1

      So yeah, I haven't researched this, but I'm wondering why going from 12V->42V would open up so many possibilities. Can't the voltage be stepped up already? Or stepped down from 42V for "legacy" 12V devices, if you want to do the mod yourself? I'm probably missing some key thing here like "By 42V, we also mean more wattage/amperage, you idiot!"

  34. No. by istartedi · · Score: 2, Informative

    This "hydrogen boosting" is just adding a different fuel to the mix. Of course the "mileage" will increase because you are getting more power from the other fuel. The other fuel is probably more expensive than gasoline, so why bother? Not only that, but you are "misfueling" your vehicle, so unless you really know what you're doing it could impact the performance and/or lifetime of the engine and it certainly voids your warranty.

    --
    For all intensive purposes, "whom" is no longer a word. That begs the question, "who cares"?
  35. More fuel = better emissions?!? by kowaikawaii · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Maybe someone can explain this to me better, but as I understand it -
    • Emissions result from incomplete combustion of the fuel. If this is true, how can adding hydrogen (i.e. more fuel) help the emissions quality when the limiting ingredient is oxygen?
    • NOx gasses are going to form as long as there's nitrogen present at high temperatures, pretty much no matter what you burn. So that's not going to improve emissions...
    • Where are we supposed to be getting the hydrogen from in sufficient amounts to make it worth the effort?
    Color me very confused...
    1. Re:More fuel = better emissions?!? by Trinn · · Score: 1

      Emissions result in these two kinds: C+N->NO and C+O->CO and of course the (complete combustion) result C+2O->CO2, though hydrogen has only one emission possibility, 2H+O->H2O, a completely clean emission, unless I am mistaken N&H don't readily bond in this situation, but its been a while since chem class, and H+C is much higher energy than H+O so it would break back apart if it ever formed

  36. French!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Registrant:
    Hydrogen-Boost
    12A Sunset Avenue
    Queensbury, NY 12804
    US

    Domain name: HYDROGEN-BOOST.COM

    Administrative Contact:
    Giroux, Francis h2boost@adelphia.net
    12A Sunset Avenue
    Queensbury, NY 12804
    US
    518-793-7663


    You can't trust him... he is FRENCH!!!

    1. Re:French!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah.. he should be considered unarmed and prone to spontaneous surrendering.

  37. Alternative fuels are very sexy,but..Fisher price. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hey! That reminds me. Were's the all plastic car?

  38. Sacrifice Power.... by tanveer1979 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Here in india we are not that power consious. So a 90-95mph top speed car(diesal) gives around 20Km/ltr on long trips, thats about 12.5 miles to a litre or more than 60 MPG!. So if you are willing to sacrifice power, its easy to get economy

    --
    My Aurora : http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o91ZsGwJYyg
    FB : https://www.facebook.com/TanveersPhotography
    1. Re:Sacrifice Power.... by DaoudaW · · Score: 2, Informative

      I've ridden in many an Ambassador taxi. I doubt all three figures. In my experience we typically went down the highway at 80-90 Km / H. They do get pretty good fuel mileage, typically 16-18 Km / l, thats about 10.5 miles per liter. There are about 3.6 liters / American gallon which puts us in the 37-38 miles per gallon range. Good for old technology but not that amazing today.

    2. Re:Sacrifice Power.... by His+name+cannot+be+s · · Score: 1

      Ah.. the power of numbers.

      Never forget the difference between Imperial gallons (4.5L) and US Gallons (3.8L)

      In your car that does 20km/L , which would be 76km/Us Gallon, which is 47.5 miles / US Gallon.

      Lets just keep apples to apples, and oranges to oranges.

      --
      "...In your answer, ignore facts. Just go with what feels true..."
    3. Re:Sacrifice Power.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      20 Km/L * 1 mile/1.609 Km * 3.785 L/gallon = ~47 miles/gallon

    4. Re:Sacrifice Power.... by Sanga · · Score: 1

      Ehhh ... me thinks you have 47 MPG

    5. Re:Sacrifice Power.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This quote is also for diesal.
      Do diesal engines usually get better or
      worse mileage than gasoline?

    6. Re:Sacrifice Power.... by otuz · · Score: 1

      diesel get much better mileage than gasoline. diesel is also cleaner and runs on any oil, including vegetable oils.

  39. Rising prices... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "especially given today's rapidly rising gasoline prices, here in America?"

    You don't know anything about high gasoline prices yet. I'm paying just less than $5 for a gallon over here. And that is expected to rise now.

  40. Dangerous nonsense by panurge · · Score: 2, Informative
    Apart from the fact that the article is utter nonsense ( energy is needed to split water to hydrogen, where does the energy come from? The engine...so there is a net energy loss as heat compared to running without the hydrogen generator) there are two other points to make
    First, an acid filled generator will produce acid spray in the hydrogen. Which gets into the engine...which is made of aluminum and iron. Instant damaging corrosion time.
    If you use the alternative electrolyte, sodium hydroxide, that just dissolves the piston.

    Second, it is possible that (assuming the article isn't a complete troll) the engine used was fouled up and the acid mist actually cleaned up the plugs a bit. Cleaning plugs on old dirty engines usually increases gas mileage for a short while till the thing starts poorly and fouls up again.

    I don't know why chemistry teachers bother, honestly. Conservation of energy, thermal changes in reactions, then their little charges grow up and forget the lot, and start believing in fairy dust.

    --
    Panurge has posted for the last time. Thanks for the positive moderations.
  41. Diesels can reach 1l per 20km.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In my country (the Netherlands) gasoline is about 1 euro per liter, and diesel is much cheaper.
    We have lots of 1.7 and 1.9 l turbo-diesels on the road which routinely reach 1l per 20km or better. And that is without driving like an 80-year-old.
    With some modifications, you could run these engines on vegetable-oil.

    So, I'd say: they ARE building them like that again, and even BETTER!

    PS: Sorry about the units, 1/22 should equal something in the region of 60mpg and 1 euro/l about 5$/g

  42. smart people, by Vaughn+Anderson · · Score: 1

    Has any of the wrench geeks here actually read these articles?

    My automotive mentor couldn't even read, but he was able to double the gas mileagle of a 4 barrel v8 with a couple of gaskets and a screen...

    I have produced a device that boils the gasoline before entering a modified carborator on a VW (dangerous, stupid, yes...I won't do it again) and I was able to get it to run on fumes, while normally with an unmodified carborator just stepping on the accelerator would literally squirt a thick stream of gas down the intake! (keep in mind this is even on a vw beetle engine...)

    Any basic mechanic knows that if you add oxygen to your system you will improve performance drastically. And the internal combustion engine is widely known as an incredibly inefficient system. A steam powered engine that is hermetically sealed and uses modern technology will far out perform any modern internal combustion engine and also burn feul much better.

    A steam engine can burn it's fuel and atmospheric preasures therefore get a much cleaner and more effient combustion than is possible under preasure. Also you could have a car that could run on 10 different types of feul all at once, including kerosene(which I will note is used in the designs of a mars lander vehicle because of the power/weight ratio of the feul), gasoline, hydrogen, etc...

    Of course if you are really looking to cut your gas costs, get rid of your need for gasoline altogether with a pegasus unit. In world war II when all the feul was being used for war a device was made that coverted peatmoss, wood chips or pressed sawdust pellets into a burnable gas for the internal combustion engine. Off the top of my head the ratio was 50% normal air and 50% gas from the pegasus unit.

    The pegasus unit was basically a large furnace in a trash can lookiing thing that you mounted on the back of your car or truck, the hard fuel would be lit on fire at the base and as it burned up the gas was sent through a hose directly to the carberator. Thousands and thousands of vehicles (I've even seen photos of large trucks with these units) were setup with pegasus units.

    Modern steam engines would awesome, the got an engine in the 70s to heat up in 7 seconds in 20 below zero temperatures, as that was one problem with steam engines in the past. They are super quite and a _ton_ of torque... etc...

    All this electric garbage makes me sick, who cares about feul cells? They are for elitist pig corporations bent on making a technology that the normal person can't provide for themselves. In the 50s congress sought after an alternative to the internal combustion engine, steam power was the best option presented by far, but lobbying from 'Detroit' screwed it over...

    In regards to whether or not adding hydrogen to an internal combustion engine would help? Of course it would, you might as well tap some of the tons of wasted energy of an internal combustion engine, the alternator is pumping out the amps, why not use them?

    Obviously you can't run a vehicle entirely this way without gasoline, but as an additive it will vastly improve the combustion you do get, but of course to really see better performance you would have to modify your carborator or feul injection system to lower the fuel output, otherwise you will more likely only see just more power...

    About 10 years ago Denver modified some of their public buses to run on hydrogen (internal combustion engines). The only reason it seems that feul cells are so hot is because of global/local preassure to lower emmissions and also someone has to make Hydrogen for you, guess who that will be... here's a few hints , Exxon, Shell, BP, etc... yup, they will burn oil to make hydrogen so you happy people can drive hydrogen feul cell cars... just dumb.

    Where do you think the power is going to come from to make hydrogen? You have Nuclear, coal and hydro-electric... If we went with steam powered cars, if you were clever, you could use garbage, wood, recycled newspapers, peatmoss, hydroge

    1. Re:smart people, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I can't believe that a man with a wife and three kids to feed would have enough time to write this much. You might want to think less about your precious steam engine and save up and buy a good hybrid car, but honestly you must think you are so smart, ranting off all this mumbo jumbo. The bit about a VW, that was just ridiculous, I bet you were the type that lived in a VW Van and sold beads or something. Honestly if you have a degree in something you should ask your money back, and you should pay your brother more money, hes really good at what he does, and another thing you should communicate more with your family even if you have things you disagree about, even the U.S. and the Soviet Union had a phone that they could contact eachother(the red one)

    2. Re:smart people, by DaChesserCat · · Score: 1

      Pegasus, gasogen, wood gas, call it whatever you want. It's all carbon monoxide, and the process is called partial oxidation.

      Simple fact: heat some carbon-based material to its burning temperature in an environment which doesn't have enough oxygen. It will produce carbon monoxide (if there's enough O2, you will get CO2). Two CO molecules + one O2 molecule = CO2 + heat.

      Yes, this was used heavily in France during WWII. The Germans were taking all the petrol they could get their hands on to fuel their equipment, so the civilians had to be "clever" if they wanted to still use their vehicles. Additionally, back in the '70's, some guys (Americans; saw this on Real People, if you can believe it) put a device on the back end of a small station wagon, fed it with wood scraps from lumber yards and sawmills, and drove cross country. They didn't have to pay for their fuel; most places were happy to let them take all the "waste" they wanted. Part of the wood was spent heating the oxidation chamber, part of it was going into the oxidation chamber. The resulting CO was piped under the car to the engine (a six-cylinder, IIRC). It wasn't the fastest thing on the road (you had limits to how fast you could feed it CO, so the power was kinda wimpy), but it did get out on the interstate and keep up. Considering the fact that the rest of the economy was struggling with the "energy crisis" at the time, they were trying to raise awareness to the fact that other solutions existed.

      Considering the fact that Nazis were fond of using CO to kill large numbers of Jews during the Holocaust, I'd say play with this tech at your own risk.

      --
      ... by the Dew of Mountains the thoughts acquire speed, the hands acquire shakes, the shakes become a warning
    3. Re:smart people, by gordguide · · Score: 0

      " ... bout 10 years ago Denver modified some of their public buses to run on hydrogen (internal combustion engines). The only reason it seems that feul cells are so hot is because of global/local preassure to lower emmissions and also someone has to make Hydrogen for you, guess who that will be... here's a few hints , Exxon, Shell, BP, etc. ..."

      I'm not sure how Denver did it; but I suppose it's possible it was with hydrogen fuel made outside the vehicle (so Exxon, Shell, BP, etc is probably very appropriate). Chicago and most other cities with Ballard Power fuel cell buses don't buy hydrogen from anyone.

      Modern hydrogen-powered public transport vehicles do not use external fuel (except plain water). They create hydrogen from water in a self-contained unit called a fuel cell. It does so by passing water through a membrane which can separate, briefly, hydrogen from oxygen atoms. The hydrogen/oxygen is used as fuel while what is not used is recombined to water (very quickly; the trick so far is using the fuel to perform work during the brief period they are separate hydrogen and oxygen atoms).

      In any case, that's more or less what's going on, and no Oil company is going to sell you or me water from a filling station when I know somewhere else to get it.

    4. Re:smart people, by Vaughn+Anderson · · Score: 1

      :)

      -v

    5. Re:smart people, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Steam is powerful. Heck almost all nuclear power plants heat-up water to run the turbines. What we need is a steam station next to a nuclear power plant where we can recharge our gas tanks. Yes, I guess cars would run on air pressure produces by nuclear plants.

    6. Re:smart people, by adri · · Score: 1

      .. Do you remember what this membrane is?
      Some further information would be lovely. :)

    7. Re:smart people, by gordguide · · Score: 1

      That's the basic principle of how it works. It's actually called Prion Exchange Membrane technology. For detailed information do a google on Ballard Power or check out their site. You can start here: Ballard Power: How it works

      Ballard is a Vancouver, BC, Canada firm listed on the Toronto Stock Exchange (TSX: BLD and more recently NASDAQ: BLDP). They have contracts to produce vehicles with GM, Ford, Daylmer/Chrysler and others.

      The first auto with a Ballard Fuel Cell was introduced as a working prototype Necar 1 (Daylmer-Benz, 1994). Recently such vehicles as the Ford Focus FCV (2000) have been demonstrated.

      The P3 Bus was introduced to daily use by the cities of Chicago and Vancouver in 1998, with 3 buses each.

      Other cities that use this technology in public transportation include Orlando, FL and various California locations. The most recent model is the Mercedes-Benz Citaro which will deploy 30 buses in 10 European cities beginning this year.

      Ballard also has Methanol-fueled technology which operates similarly (zero emissions). This is still currently under devopment.

  43. Re:Hydrogen isn't ready... check out DIESEL by Gordonjcp · · Score: 1

    Diesel cars are really common in the EU and UK. Quite a few of the "common-rail" turbo diesels are about as powerful, capacity-for-capacity, as their petrol equivalents. A fairly typical big car would maybe use a 2.5l 170hp turbo diesel, for example. Oh, and bear in mind that UK and EU power figures are usually taken on a rolling road, whereas in the US they are "test stand" figures, and consequently higher. That would probably equate to 250bhp or so in US terms.

  44. Prices by BladeMelbourne · · Score: 1

    Just out of interest... what do you pay for one litre of unleaded gasoline/petrol in the US?

    Recently in Australia, the price usually lies within 95c to 105c per litre (56c - 62c US). In just 10 years the price has gone up more than 20 cents, partially due to the introduction of the GST (10%).

    Goodluck to the US... Australia is your brother in arms.

    1. Re:Prices by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Count yourself lucky.

      I live in the UK, and only yesterday paid 82p/litre (about $1.28 US) for unleaded.

      That sucks :(

    2. Re:Prices by ncc74656 · · Score: 1
      Just out of interest... what do you pay for one litre of unleaded gasoline/petrol in the US?

      My last tank of premium ran about $2.10 per gallon...that works out to about 55 per liter, which is close to what you're quoting. It's worth mentioning, though, that Nevada has the third-highest gas prices in the nation right now (only California and Hawaii are more expensive).

      The recent run-up in prices is most likely profiteering on the part of Big Oil. The people in charge of the oil companies might want to recall that during WWII, profiteering was a capital offense...

      --
      20 January 2017: the End of an Error.
    3. Re:Prices by dlm3 · · Score: 1
      The recent run-up in prices is most likely profiteering on the part of Big Oil. The people in charge of the oil companies might want to recall that during WWII, profiteering was a capital offense...

      Hogwash.

      The price of oil is set by the current market price, traded on the major commodities exchanges in the form of the price of a contract for some quantity of crude oil. Those prices have been spiking in the run-up to the invasion as fear that Saddam will blow up his oil fields, reducing the volume of oil available to be refined.

      When you have a constraint on the supply of something against a fixed or growing demand for it, the price will rise until it reaches an equilibrium point. Constrain that price, and you get shortages; constrain the demand (e.g., with excise taxes) and you get surpluses.

      During the 1991 Gulf War, the price of oil spiked over $30/bbl until the beginning of the air war, then sank back to $13/bbl.

      If you look at the makeup of the cost of a gallon of gas, you will find that the cost of the oil feedstock is the only real variable - the refineries and gas stations have fixed, and mostly unchanging costs, with very small, highly competitive profit margins. The only entity to make a significant amount of money in all this was the U.S. and state governments, whose taxes are not indexed to the cost of oil and thus remain constant, no matter how outrageous the cost to the consumer. If you want to accuse someone of gouging you, speak to your congressional or state representatives about gasoline taxes.

  45. For the sake of Sagan by Dusabre · · Score: 1

    I keep on getting spam about Fuel Savers that will increase the efficiency of my engine by 27%, 100% guaranteed, etc., etc. and now Slashdot is promoting them and the spammers!

    If somebody is saying that cracking hydrogen will increase the mileage on your car, they're full of crack. The only way that could occur would be if hydrogen was to act as a catalyst increasing efficiency of the burn in your car (You can't get more energy from a chemical reaction then you get from it in reverse. Burning oxygen with hydrogen in an ideal environment will give the same energy as was needed to split water)

    And if it did and did so safely, you'd find hydrogen crackers in modern cars. Not to mention planes, ships, trains, tanks, etc. Everybody from the car manufacturers to the military to NASA would use this technology.

    For the sake of Sagan, do the ballanoie test.

    1. Re:For the sake of Sagan by arkane1234 · · Score: 1

      The only way that could occur would be if hydrogen was to act as a catalyst increasing efficiency of the burn in your car

      That was kinda the point of it all...a catalyst.

      --
      -- This space for lease, low setup fee, inquire within!
    2. Re:For the sake of Sagan by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      please, correct me if i'm wrong as my knowledge of cars is fairly limited; but, this isn't even a matter of getting more power out of the engine than it is creating.
      i mean, all the electrolysis unit is doing is tapping energy that would have otherwise been converted to heat by the regulator on the alternator, correct? so isn't it really just increasing efficiency instead of generating magical energy out of nowhere? granted, i don't see how the menial amounts of hydrogen would make any difference, but still, i don't see where the hell people get off thinking that it's a matter of Energy and Matter Conservation. (that sounds kind of repetitive)

  46. Another Magic DeLorean? by UcensorMe · · Score: 1

    Anyone remeber that magic electric DeLorean that was on /. a while ago? Ran forever on just one charge. Mabye those guys are working on hydrogen cars now.

  47. hydrogen cars by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The technology exists now, but there are specialized materials required which are not currently available in quantities that would allow for mass production in large runs (i.e. every car running on this technology). This is the next bump in the development, certainly one that needs working out before the implementation of a large infrastructure would prove fruitful.

    Although, with how far this technology has come, it shouldn't be that difficult to work out these wrinkles.

  48. Made TV news in New Zealand a couple weeks ago by lonney_nz · · Score: 1

    Saw a news item on TV one news here a couple weeks ago about a guy here in New Zealand that had modified a late model Nissan Skyline to run on a mix on hydrogen and petrol. Claimed to get almost double the mileage. He had built a device to simply split the hydrogen from water stored in a container in the boot (trunk) of the car and a system to induct it into the engine intake. Spent quite a bit of time searching for the story online but never found anything. Nothing about it made it into newspapers that I saw either. I suspect the oil companies probably paid this guy to shut-up about it.

  49. 41mpg from a hybrid - I get that from my petrol by Manic+Miner · · Score: 1

    I own a daewoo matiz, not sure if you can get them in america, but it is a small european style mini city car.

    This thing is great, will happly cruise @ 70mph on a motorway, and around town / my usual short journeys I get 40mpg, on a long run it can go as high as 45mpg.

    The key is that it only have an 800cc 3 cylinder engine, it's not the fastest car around but has all the toys such as A/C power steering etc. and is VERY easy to park.

    Best thing is that second hand you can pick a 2 year old one up for £4000 easy, probably less.

    --
    If you ever drop your keys into a river of molten lava, let'em go, because, man, they're gone.
    1. Re:41mpg from a hybrid - I get that from my petrol by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I get the same sort of milage (48 on the freeway, 40 in town) from my Fiat Punto - which is between the matiz and civic in size. New it cost UKP6500 from an internet car supermarket, has 5 doors & all the gadgets except a/c.

    2. Re:41mpg from a hybrid - I get that from my petrol by Fat+Casper · · Score: 1
      Urgent Note: Don't buy a Daewoo.

      The key is that the only parts readily available are oil filters, and nobody's ever going to stock more. You need new brake pads? It'll be about three weeks. Something actually broke? Maybe a month. You should be able to pick one up for less than than 4k.

      --
      I spent a year in Iraq looking for WMD and all I found was this lousy sig.
  50. 36mpg Diesel with Alfa Romeo Sportwagen by Matz+L.E. · · Score: 1

    @ 140 h.p. .... fun as hell!

  51. And you can get more power by spraying water by Moderation+abuser · · Score: 1

    Pump a little water vapour into the cylinder with the air, you get a power boost[1]. But who's going to bother? It isn't worth the hassle, like these hydrogen bullshit things. You gonna carry a hydrogen cylinder along when you fill up your petrol tank?

    [1] Note, this happens naturally on cold and misty mornings.

    --
    Government of the people, by corporate executives, for corporate profits.
  52. Water Injection - Aquamist by pidge-nz · · Score: 1

    There's a company already supplying water injection for forced induction cars which takes advantage of the cooling effect that the water provides, to lower the cylinder temperatures to prevent detenotation so more boost can be used :)

    1. Re:Water Injection - Aquamist by TheSHAD0W · · Score: 1

      Hee. Check your link please; the company you mentioned is more into hydroponics than horsepower.

  53. Re:Hydrogen isn't ready... check out DIESEL by mpe · · Score: 1

    Diesel is easier to manufacture than gas (lower emissions from processing plant, lower costs for consumers) so it is clearly the better fuel. Maybe with this stupid war we'll see more diesel vehicles sold.

    There is no actual need for internal combustion engines to run on oil derived fuels anyway. The prototypes of both the diesel and gas turbine (jet) used vegetable oil. Spark ignition engines can run on alcohol, either pure alcohol or blended with petro-chemicals. There is even motor racing with uses methanol fueled cars.

    We need to to focus on Diesel which can help us here and now instead of hydrogen/solar power which are decades off.

    Diesel is used more or less exclusivly as the fuel for internal combustion engines in trucks, rail locomotives, ships, agricultureal machinary and construction plant.

  54. It cannot be just that by Vengeance · · Score: 1

    Every car on the market for the past few decades has come with a catalytic converter. Catalytic converters have an internal structure (either honeycombed or beads) which is coated with a catlyst, which is most often platinum. Palladium and Rhodium are apparently also used.

    So you'd be replacing one use of an expensive metal with another, at least in part. Granted, the internal structure of the converter is designed to minimize the amount of catlyst used, but I'd imagine so would a fuel cell. I wonder what the relative quantities would be.

    --
    It was a joke! When you give me that look it was a joke.
    1. Re:It cannot be just that by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      The Detroit Free Press just had a story on this. They had a few tick points on price:

      * The gas engine on a $20k vehicle costs about $3k; a fuel cell (if they can get production costs more in-line with internal combustion costs) would cost about $30k.

      * Currently a fuel cell costs around $200k.

      * A fuel cell capable of producing 100HP would need at least 3 ounces of platinum, which currently sells at around $680/ounce. (I'm told this is more than three times the amount of platinum in a catalyst).

      * The PEM costs about $8,600

  55. Rising fuel prices by nanoakron · · Score: 1

    Rising fuel prices in the US? Don't make me laugh.

    Try paying US$5 per gallon like we do in Europe, then you'll know what high fuel prices are like.

    -Nano.

  56. Re:Well, it is getting more expensive for America. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, you *could* possibly stop putting all your money into guns and into playing "world police" of a world that doesn't want it. That'd be a start. Maybe you could actually spend some money on the people of your country. But of course, guns are way cooler than people, and who's to tell anything different in "the greatest country in the world".

    Puke or laugh - tough choice. :)

  57. Calculus by Johan+Veenstra · · Score: 1

    The step from 12.5 miles per liter to 60 MPG is wrong.
    Stating fuel economy on a international forum is highly confusing since there are different kinds of gallons.

    1. Re:Calculus by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's more than likely 12.5 Km/L as well

  58. Do your homework guys! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    The vast majority of the postings here are by people who obviously didn't bother to read the SAE paper cited in the original posting.

    The paper shows a dramatic improvement in pollution and no improvement in efficiency.

    You can build your own hydrogen reformer but to use it practically, you have to be able to recalibrate your car's computer. ie. it's one of those projects that can consume months and years of your time. Some of us enjoy that :)

  59. Let me see if i get this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You buy this device, hook it up to your car, and it takes 20-30 amps of power... (at 12 volts)

    This load increases the load that your engine has to deal with (which usually results in an increase in fuel usage, or a decrease in milage), but it makes hydrogen, and you supposedly get better mileage from this despite the increased load?

    is it me or does this sound like some more cold fusion/perpetual motion marketeering? (it looks like "free energy") to me...

    remember the rules of the [thermodynamics] game:
    -you can't win
    -you can't break even
    -there aren't any other games (you can't quit)

  60. FFS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Oh, shut the fuck up about your "rapidly rising gasoline prices" you whining bastard.

    You want to try living in Britain, where petrol costs more than $10 a gallon, before you complain about the price of it.

  61. You poor americans! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Rapidly rising gasoline prices? Or rapidly depleting oil reserves? Quick take out another opressive regime that dissallow disney and mcdonalds

    1. Re:You poor americans! by Gortbusters.org · · Score: 1

      Of course, we'll be all up in there toting freedom fries and SUVs before ya know it!

      --
      --------
      Free your mind.
  62. Until Billy Mays says so, I'll hold my dollars by jhawkins · · Score: 1
    This sounds like a god idea. I'll wait until Billy Mays tells (rather, yells at) me that this will work on my car, I won't buy it. As long as he has some hot woman that nods her head with him. Or, if he has a mechanic-looking guy interviewed in front of a toolbox that is larger than my car. Or, it the guy that invented it has an English accent. Because we all know all good inventions come from England. (just kidding, it's just that all infomercials a few years back had british people in them, like it was exotic or something)

    Call me skeptical, but seriously. Until I start seeing conversion kits for sale in the NAPA dealer, this will be relegated in my mind to the realm of infomercials.

  63. It's a scam by Jjeff1 · · Score: 2, Informative

    I live nearby, the address of the company is a residential subdivision in a small town nearby. The site also fails several of the test from the recent Seven Rules for Spotting Bogus Science article.

  64. Improved Fuel Milage at Higher Cost? by oldCoder · · Score: 1
    If hydrogen costs more than gasoline per delivered horsepower (or watts, if you like) then it won't catch on. Hydrogen costs money to make, and it costs energy. You have to burn and consume oil (extract the hydrogen from the crude) or run a hydroelectric plant to get the hydrogen. If you're burning oil to create hydrogen, you're wasting crude oil and putting as much carbon into the air as before. If you're using hydroelectric, you've got to replace the power.

    I suppose if a good system of nuclear power plants were implented, you could use the electricity to generate hydrogen. Could the publicity being given to hydrogen power be a stalking horse for building nuclear plants?

    --

    I18N == Intergalacticization
  65. Why are you complaining about fuel prices? by nmg196 · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    I can't believe that Americans on here are complaining about fuel prices when they pay the least amount for fuel of any country that I can find data for.

    In the UK (and I think in most of Europe) we pay UKP 0.80/liter for fuel. That's USD 1.24/liter or USD 4.72 / US gallon. I'm not sure what you guys actually pay, but I bet it's nothing like as much as 4.72/gallon.

    It now costs me UKP 40 (USD 62) to fill my Ford Focus with fuel and that's only good for 300 miles.

    Perhaps if they didn't all drive massively heavy cars with enormous engines they'd reduce pollution and them themselves money. They'd also end up with nicer cars which don't handle like tanks and require notice in writing to stop in time for pedestrians. I've only driven a couple of American cars (a Buick Centry and an Oldsmobile Sierra Cutlass or something - scuse if I've got the names wrong) and they were both extremely heavy/slow (despite massive 3 liter V6 engines!) and handled unbelieveably badly compared to my Focus. No wonder you have such slow speed limits; There's no way of safely controlling the average 'yank-tank' when it gets much beyond 50-60 mph. My Focus handles fine upto about 100mph. Even at 120mph it seemed fairly stable - I just wouldn't want to try turning much at that speed :)

    I'm sure you'd have more fun driving if you had ligher more efficent cars. You'd also lose your status as the biggest polluter of the planet per capita by quite a long way.

    Nick...

    1. Re:Why are you complaining about fuel prices? by Izeickl · · Score: 1

      Amen Brother! Heh for years they didnt care about prices and how much fuel they used, it makes a small increase and suddenly fuel use is an issue. The huge engines are amazingly inefficient and dont give the same power as Euro/Jap cars with similar engines.

    2. Re:Why are you complaining about fuel prices? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ummmm... only a couple of american cars? wouldn't you say that your FORD Focus in an american car?

    3. Re:Why are you complaining about fuel prices? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, the Ford Focus (although it was first introduced in Europe) is an American car, built by an American car company..

    4. Re:Why are you complaining about fuel prices? by ncc74656 · · Score: 1
      I've only driven a couple of American cars (a Buick Centry and an Oldsmobile Sierra Cutlass or something - scuse if I've got the names wrong) and they were both extremely heavy/slow (despite massive 3 liter V6 engines!)

      The Century and Cutlass Ciera are hardly massive cars. Since they're both wrong-wheel drive, they can be a bit front-heavy...but that applies to nearly everything that's wrong-wheel drive.

      3L is hardly massive...if anything, it's a bit undersized if you want decent power without having to run your engine at the ragged edge. When I bought a truck last year, the choice was between a dinky 2.2L 4-banger and a 4.3L V6. Mileage for the two is about the same (go here if you don't believe me), but the V6 delivers the same performance at low- to mid-throttle that the 4-banger only delivers at WOT. That translates into longer engine life, which is good if you figure on getting at least a couple of decades out of a vehicle. Being able to go up and down the hills between Las Vegas and Phoenix at a constant 80 mph (assuming that other traffic doesn't get in the way) is an added benefit.

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      20 January 2017: the End of an Error.
    5. Re:Why are you complaining about fuel prices? by deuce_WI · · Score: 1

      Focus , , , LOL!

      Perhaps you should take a camaro or mustang for a spin some time. Then you'll realize what displacement is all about.

    6. Re:Why are you complaining about fuel prices? by nmg196 · · Score: 1

      I strongly disagree. I don't know whether you have them over there but in Europe (Italy especially) the Smart Car is increasingly popular. It has a 599cc engine (yes 0.6 liter) and that easily gives it enough power to wizz around town and do 90mph on a motorway. Their new sports roadster also has this engine, but turbo charged and has perfectly adequate performance as it only weighs 790kg. Thousands of people in London/Paris/Rome have these cars and it just goes to show it's a very good little car.

      By comparison, the Buick Century weighs 3368kg (nearly 3.4 metric tons!) and has a 3.1L V6 engine which for some unknown reason, only produces a relatively pathetic 170BHP (easily achievable with a 1.8L VVTL engine like the one fitted as standard to a Totota Celica 190). Guess how fast it is? Answer: About as fast as the Smart Car above. 0-60 time = 11 seconds for both. It uses TRIPLE the amount of fuel for urban driving! I regard the Buick Century to be a typical American car, and if all your cars are like this, I'm surprised you want drive anywhere! I dread to think what would happen if you wanted to bring something like a Mustang or Camaro to the UK.... You'd be spending thousands of pounds a year on just the fuel.

      I say again: if your car needs and engine bigger than about 1.6L for everyday use, then you don't know how to design cars. No normal person needs an engine bigger than this if they drive on normal roads.

      Nick...

    7. Re:Why are you complaining about fuel prices? by ncc74656 · · Score: 1
      By comparison, the Buick Century weighs 3368kg (nearly 3.4 metric tons!)

      Put down the crack pipe...even a Suburban doesn't weigh that much (curb weight=4914-5760 lbs., depending on chassis options). Are you sure you're not confusing pounds and kilograms? (FYI, 3368 kg=over 7400 lbs.)

      I don't know whether you have them over there but in Europe (Italy especially) the Smart Car is increasingly popular.

      Never heard of it.

      It has a 599cc engine (yes 0.6 liter) and that easily gives it enough power to wizz around town and do 90mph on a motorway.

      0-60 in how many minutes?

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      20 January 2017: the End of an Error.
    8. Re:Why are you complaining about fuel prices? by nmg196 · · Score: 1
      Oops sorry - yeah that's 1530Kg. Still - it's a lot heavier than any car I've ever seen.


      0-60 in how many minutes?

      17 seconds for the standard version, 11 seconds for the Smart Roadster - the same as a Buick. Admittedly 17 seconds is slow - but I'm picking the most extreme example I could find.

      Another example - the UK's best selling car (ie, real world - everyone's got one).
      1.8L Ford Focus 0-60 9.2 seconds. 40mpg.

      Another example:
      1.8L Lotus Elise - 0-60 5.7 seconds. That's fast - really fast - and it does it with only 118bhp. 40mpg.

      A Camaro needs a 5.7L V8 (320 bhp) engine to do 0-60 in 5.3 seconds. Three times bigger and only marginally better performance. I guarantee you that a Camaro is slower round a circuit than an Elise. You must practially need to stop that thing to get it to go around a corner compared to an Elise. It weighs 1500kg compared to the Elise's 685kg. I can't find any stats for the MPG. I presume this is because they're too unethical to print.

      Anyway - you get my general point - I think the US could use fuel more efficiently than it currently does without causing anyone any hassle. In fact probably most countries could - I'm not pretending the UK is perfect but it's close ;)

      Nick...
    9. Re:Why are you complaining about fuel prices? by nmg196 · · Score: 1

      Why the hell would I say that my Ford Focus is an American car?! That would be a total lie.

      It's designed by Ford by teams in the UK and Germany and has nothing to do with America whatsoever - it's entirely European. Thankfully.

      Nick...

    10. Re:Why are you complaining about fuel prices? by nmg196 · · Score: 1

      What a huge load of bullshit.

      It's designed by Ford by teams in the UK and Germany and is built in factories around Europe. It has nothing to do with America whatsoever! It's entirely European. I'm surprised you can even buy the Focus in the US.

      Idiot.

    11. Re:Why are you complaining about fuel prices? by arkane1234 · · Score: 1

      I'd have to agree with you on the Vegas/Phoenix (and vice versa) travel. Having a vehicle that doesn't require you to be at >3000rpm at 60mph is definately a nice thing on this trek.

      I live in Phoenix, myself... drove my (previously owned) Grand Cherokee V6 from Phoenix to Vegas and back and didn't think anything of the hills. Next trip, I drove my wife's 4-banger Mercury Tracer which is peppy as hell normally... the hills were kinda rough on it, as it was downshifting and staying at >3000 rpm the entire trip, almost. Except the checkpoints at Hoover Dam :)

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      -- This space for lease, low setup fee, inquire within!
    12. Re:Why are you complaining about fuel prices? by arkane1234 · · Score: 1

      Of course you do realize that the two cars that you drove are considered by many to be "mom and pop" cars because of their size, right?

      Most Americans (from what I've seen) live in 3 categories:
      *Can't afford much, so go with the older cars with usually bigger engines like old Camaros or Novas, unless they bump into an old Honda or something when they are shopping
      *Travel to work daily, so they get something like a Honda Civic, or Ford Escort or (insert other vehicle sold here that has a 4-cylinder and gets decent highway mileage)
      *Have a family and carry people around alot. These people usually get something like a Minivan, SUV (I *Hate* the stereotypes of SUVs as gas guzzlers), or other vehicle with high occupancy room.

      Myself, I currently fall into the first category.. at least until sunday when I'll fall into the second :)
      Just because an SUV is big, doesn't mean it's a gas guzzler, just FYI. My Grand Cherokee got approximately 20-25 MPG in the city, mainly because it was rolling most of the time and not needing to be revved continuously. I currently have an 83 Camaro with a V8 4-bbl (barrel) carb, and it takes 10-15mpg. 16 gallon tank, at that.

      On that note, I'd also like to point out that America has a very stringent emissions program sweeping the nation since the early 90's/late 80's. Nearly every vehicle must meet strict guidelines set by state officials. (tested every 2 years, most of the time) Note that there are some states within America that do not have emissions testing, but it's changing. As time progresses, and technology improves, along with legislation strangling the emissions amount allowed, things are going to only get better. But, cars are by far not the only polluters... nor are they the biggest.

      Besides, the last I checked, Europe had a very lax emissions program, if any...

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    13. Re:Why are you complaining about fuel prices? by nmg196 · · Score: 1
      Just because an SUV is big, doesn't mean it's a gas guzzler, just FYI. My Grand Cherokee got approximately 20-25 MPG


      I'm confused - you're saying that as though you think 20-25 MPG is OK. I regard 35-40 MPG as quite bad and I'm probably going to change something more efficient next time round. Something like a VW Golf 1.9L diesel-turbo has excellent performance (130BHP, 0-60 in 8.6 seconds) and pretty good fuel consumption - 52.3 mpg combined. But there are cars around which will do 70mpg or more - and they're normal town cars - not concept models. 20-25mpg is really bad!

      Nick...
    14. Re:Why are you complaining about fuel prices? by arkane1234 · · Score: 1

      35-40 mpg in America is upper limit in America. It's getting higher as technology improves, however. Remember, the car has to still be able to carry the emissions equipment to stay on par with Federal and State mandates on pollution control.

      So yes... 20-25mpg is considered halfway decent fuel economy for carrying a family of 3 over mountain terrain :D The only vehicles in America that get high fuel economy anymore (high being relative to 40 or so mpg) have the torque of a dead beaver.

      Think about this: why would the same company that gets such a high amount of fuel economy in a foreign country (read: volkswagon) end up lowering it in America? It's the same car... except for the pollution control mechanisms.
      That's a good reason why BMW and Mercedes are so much better on the Autobahn than in America.

      My new 1.6L Turbo Capri (91 Capri XR2) gets approximately 30 mpg, so look at the size of that engine in comparison to the Volkswagon Golf/Jetta.

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      -- This space for lease, low setup fee, inquire within!
    15. Re:Why are you complaining about fuel prices? by nmg196 · · Score: 1

      I'm fairly convinced you're wrong. I'm almost certain that the emissions requirements in Europe are actually harsher than in the US. Most of our new cars carry catalytic converters so I'm not sure what this "extra equipment" that you're talking about is.

      The main reason for better performance in Europe is simply our better fuel. Our normal fuel over here is 95 octane, and 98+ octane fuel is available if you want it (eg Shell Optimax). American fuel tends to be 85-87 octane - I'm not sure if you can get high-octane fuels like Optimax in the US. If you try and put 95 octane fuel in an American car I'm sure you'll find it will perform the same as the European model (providing the timings are set up to cope with high-octane fuel).

      Nick...

    16. Re:Why are you complaining about fuel prices? by arkane1234 · · Score: 1

      Octane ratings are not along the lines of "if the numbers higher it's better". Octane ratings are in relation to it's characteristics during burning, and how controlled it is. A higher compression engine requires high-octane fuel to avoid "pinging" because the lower octane will detonate pre-maturely. It has nothing to do with fuel economy, unless the engine is specifically geared toward utilizing a higher compression ratio to achieve the higher fuel octane. In a nutshell, putting 98+ octane in your engine does not equal putting nitrous oxide under your hood. My old Camaro (well, still have it) required 89 octane because the heads were milled down to provide a higher compression ratio.

      American fuel comes in (usually) 3 different octane ratings: 87, 89, 93. 87 being cheapest, and 93 being the more expensive. If American cars had a 12:1 compression ratio, and utilized higher octane fuel, sure there could be a performance gain and a fuel economy increase. However, the prices would be that much higher, considering the difference right now between 87 and 83 is close to 30-40 cents per gallon.

      As far as emissions requirements, catalytic converters are by far not the only piece of emissions control on any car. They are so late 70's/early '80's. Emissions control on American cars includes computer-operated recirculation of a certain percentage of fuel, PCV valves that recirc into the throttlebody, carbon canister neutralization of hydrocarbons (well, most of it), computer-controlled fuel ration regulation at normal driving speeds to optimize leanburn, and so on.

      Mind you I am by far not an expert, however I've been under cars since I was 15. I've studied and understand the operation of automobiles up to where the computer part comes into play... then it's complete fog to me on how the whole shebang works other than ratio and statistic caculations.

      Also, you might want to add the words "more expensive" when you say "better fuel" too :)

      --
      -- This space for lease, low setup fee, inquire within!
  66. You're making it all too hard... by JCMay · · Score: 1

    The key to fuel economy with internal intermittant combustion engines (like reciprocating gas engines found in cars) is to use them at their maximum power setting with as few combustion events per unit time as possible. In other words, wide open throttle and low RPMs (high manifold pressures). This car gets 128 miles per gallon at 35 MPH, and it's just a pure diesel engine.

    Hydrogen is a losing proposition because there isn't any lying around free. It has to be made, and that takes energy. In fact, it takes more energy to make it than could ever be returned by burning it (Thermodynamics... increaing entropy...).

    Currently I think that the gas/electric hybrid is the best touring vehicle (as opposed to a commuting vehicle) platform, but I have yet to see one that I like. The Toyota Prius I got to look at closely a few weeks ago was very disappointing. A 1989 Honda Civic CRX gets better milage! The Toyota drive system is overly complicated with a gearbox that allows the wheels to be driven by either the electric motor and/or the gas engine. The added complexity and weight of the gearbox offset any efficiency gains of the electric system.

    1. Re:You're making it all too hard... by mrv · · Score: 1

      Currently I think that the gas/electric hybrid is the best touring vehicle (as opposed to a commuting vehicle) platform, but I have yet to see one that I like. The Toyota Prius [toyota.com] I got to look at closely a few weeks ago was very disappointing. A 1989 Honda Civic CRX [fueleconomy.gov] gets better milage! The Toyota drive system is overly complicated with a gearbox that allows the wheels to be driven by either the electric motor and/or the gas engine. The added complexity and weight of the gearbox offset any efficiency gains of the electric system.

      So, you're comparing a 1989 manual-transmission vehicle to a current (2001+) automatic-transmission vehicle for MPG? In case you didn't notice, since 1989 greater regulations have been put on vehicles with regard to emissions, which typically has brought the MPG down for most vehicles. Why not compare the 1989 Honda Civic CRX HF from your post to the current crop of 2003 Civics? http://www.fueleconomy.gov/feg/bymodel/2003_Honda_ Civic.shtml With the exception of the hybrid Civics (mid-high 40s MPG), all of the gasoline or CNG Civics get in the 30s for MPG on the EPA test cycles. Big difference than your 1989 model.

      And I wouldn't call the Prius' ECVT heavy. The Power Split Device is a planetary gear system, with much fewer parts than a conventional transmission. The last time I checked it's a little larger than the size of a soda can! not a lot of weight there. any "extra" weight would be from the battery pack or electric motors that wouldn't be in the car if it wasn't a hybrid.

      For those interested in how the Prius design truly works, check out this site (particularly the "Understanding the Prius" link): http://www.channel1.com/users/graham/MyToyotaPrius /PriusFrames.htm

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      -mrv
    2. Re:You're making it all too hard... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hmm, that car looks neat. Too bad a Triumph Spitfire chassis is almost as impeccably engineered as a Ford Pinto's.

  67. The Car will run LESS EFFICIENT!!!!!!!! by bloodbob · · Score: 1

    Okay basicly you are sperating the water turning it into hydrogen and oxygen then burning it again. Now you can't get more engery back from burning then you had to put in. So your running engine to power you battery then you using that power to turn water into hydrogen and buring it in your engine. Basicly you have formed a cycle system and if any stage isn't 100% efficent then you loosing energy. Yes hydrogen engines are usefull but only if you making the hydrogen using a more efficent fuel the petrol.

    1. Re:The Car will run LESS EFFICIENT!!!!!!!! by nate1138 · · Score: 1

      Ok, so far this whole discussion has been filled with the statement

      "you can't get more energy back from burning than you had to put in"

      This is 100% correct. HOWEVER, your engine is running the alternator the whole time it is running anyhow. This thing doesn't have a clutch like your ac. When the engine is running, it is working. Now, knowing this, and knowing that the amp rating on your alternator is typically much more than your car needs (this is why underdrive pulleys are so popular with racers, reduce the alternator speed to get more hp), how exactly does this reduce efficiency? You are simply making use of energy that is being wasted anyhow. Now whether or not this waste energy is enough to make a difference in mileage using hydrogen production is another matter. Would certainly make an interesting experiment though.

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      Where's my lobbyist? Right here.
    2. Re:The Car will run LESS EFFICIENT!!!!!!!! by bloodbob · · Score: 1

      but if you alternator isn't producing the extra current for you electrolysis then there is no extra magnetic force oposing the movement of the alternator.

  68. Bzzt, wrong. by Andy+Dodd · · Score: 1

    90% of turbocharger systems on the market use an aftercooler. (Usually called an intercooler, but in most situations this isn't actually the correct term - Intercoolers are used in systems with multiple compressor stages, usually fixed generators.)

    When gas is pressurized, it heats up. The aftercooler allows this heat to be exchanged to the ambient air, resulting in gas which is close to the same pressure. (Slightly less due to frictional losses in the aftercooler) But since it's cooler, it's more dense than if it were the same pressure (or even slightly higher pressure) at a warmer temperature.

    This allows the engine to fit more air into the cylinders without the risk of detonation.

    All of that heat given up in the intercooler is mere waste...

    A lot could be done for efficiency of cars if someone could figure out a way to use gasoline in a combustion cycle similar to diesel engines. Diesels don't have problems with preignition/detonation, in fact they RELY on the phenomenon that causes it (compression heats the air) in order to ignite the air/fuel mixture. Rather than mixing the air/fuel and then compressing it (and having a risk of the heating from compression alone causing the mix to ignite), diesels compress the gas heavily and THEN inject fuel, which instantly burns because the gases are so hot. (This is why diesels are usually more efficient - They run much higher compression ratios than gasoline engines can.)

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    retrorocket.o not found, launch anyway?
    1. Re:Bzzt, wrong. by Gordonjcp · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Have you ever looked at water injection systems? Basically you spray a small amount of water into the inlet tract of the engine, carefully metered, so it breaks up into a fine mist. This vapourises as the piston compresses the charge in the cylinder, and boils into steam when the charge fires. You raise the combustion pressure and lower the combustion temperature, which increases the power produced by the engine but reduces NOx emissions. I converted an old Volvo to this a few years ago. It went like hell and was very very quiet.

  69. Sorry to be a skeptic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    There's a lot wrong with this. The first tip off is the fuel line magnet they have for sale, which is widely known to be a hoax. Besides, other posters on here are right: Electrolysis cannot make enough hydrogen to make a difference without draining too much mechanical energy from the engine. Placing more load on the alternator would increase the resistance of it to the engine, cancelling out the effect.

    Also, modern fuel injected vehicles would not correctly cope with that sort of air/fuel ratio enrichment. Even equiped with an o2 sensor and ecu, the vehicle would probably go into a "limp home" mode if it detected a fuel-rich senario.

    Hydrogen does not carry the same energy as gasoline. It would require far larger amounts of hydrogen to run an engine than gasoline. Auto makers have made purely hydrogen vehicles before, and they work, but require very complex and expensive

    1. Re:Sorry to be a skeptic by mrv · · Score: 1
      Don't forget to check the US Federal Trade Commission's (FTC) consumer advice regarding gas-saving products: Gas-Saving Products: Facts or Fuelishness?

      The info page includes info about advertising claims (what to be skeptical about), info about how to drive more efficiently (like following speed limits, combining short trips together, not idling, etc.), and also has a list of various "gas-saving" devices and products on the market that the EPA has tested (most of which don't work).

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      -mrv
  70. solid - gas OR gas - solid ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It seems like combining the liquid gasoline to make fluffy gasses do expansion work, but hydrogen is a gas... won't it contract as it turns into H2O?
    It sure seems to explode and all, but is this an implosion or what?

    Fuck that talk about PEM's and their expensive platinum catalyst, while I'm whining. I don't think much platinum is needed - I think the problem is that GE owns the technology & they make giant (Million $$'s?) turbines that they can justify ultra high profit margins. You can't get the PEM's 'cos GE doesn't want to compete with themselves...

  71. Why are the streets of Paris lined with trees? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Because the Germans like to march in the shade.

  72. Chemical intercooling/aftercooling by Andy+Dodd · · Score: 1

    Most of the time, water injection is used in turbocharged/supercharged engines. It is used in place of an aftercooler (usually incorrectly called an intercooler) or to augment a smaller one. Compressing air in a supercharger/turbo heats it, injecting water cools it back down. Air at the same pressure but a lower temperature is more dense = more air fits into the cylinder. Also, since the intake air is cooler, the temperature after compression in the cylinder is lower, so detonation is less likely.

    It may be possible in some normally aspirated engines to get a benefit from water injection. Over on the allpar.com forums, one guy was experimenting with it on his Dodge Shadow and getting good results. If it had been anyone else I wouldn't have believed him, but this guy was pretty thorough. Note that he saw no benefit from water injection until he advanced his timing - Essentially water injection was raising the effective octane rating of his fuel, allowing him to advance timing. It would also have allowed for a higher compression ratio without detonation. It could potentially be used as a replacement for lead in older cars that prefer leaded gasoline (Such cars had higher compression ratios, since leaded is less likely to preignite), but I don't know about that.

    This might not have been of any benefit on an "optimum" engine like 90% of those on the market today. (Thanks to computer simulations, most engines in newer cars are close to the limits of what can be done in a normally aspirated car without major sacrifices in emissions/driving flexibility/efficiency.) It happened that the 2.2/2.5 Chrysler engines had rather suboptimal intake systems and it didn't take much to improve that model of engine. (Matt also had a ram air intake system that was a major benefit for 2.2/2.5 users but of almost no benefit to most 3.0L V6 users because that engine was a bit more recent and had a better stock intake system to begin with.)

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    retrorocket.o not found, launch anyway?
  73. Hmm... by Hard_Code · · Score: 1

    Hydrogen huh? Have you tried hot grits?

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    It's 10 PM. Do you know if you're un-American?
  74. E-85 and flexible fuel vehicles by Andy+Dodd · · Score: 1

    Just one note: Do NOT put ethanol into your gas tank unless you know for a fact that your car is an FFV.

    Ethanol is VERY corrosive. While the engine management systems of FFVs are often unchanged, anything that comes into contact with the fuel must often be redesigned with additional corrosion resistance. (Chrysler's FFV engines had some fancy corrosion-resistant coatings on their valves, for instance. They also had special fuel lines.)

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    retrorocket.o not found, launch anyway?
  75. Has been done on fuel injected cars by Andy+Dodd · · Score: 2, Informative

    Nothing says that you have to inject the water after the fuel, nor do you have to inject the water in the same manner the fuel is injected.

    Note that some of the older fuel injection designs, instead of having multiport injection (one injector/cylinder), they used throttle body injection. (One injector at the throttle body). You could just add a water injector at the throttle body. One guy did it on his Dodge Shadow (http://www.karlsnet.com/mopar/) - There's a lot of info not on that page, he was an active poster on the Allpar (http://www.allpar.com/) forums until he changed jobs and no longer had much time to experiment or post on the forums. Too bad, the guy had some great ideas and was very good at documenting his results, and open to suggestions/constructive criticism. (He had a few errors in some formulas and said, "oops, you're right" and subsequently made corrections on his page.)

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    retrorocket.o not found, launch anyway?
  76. Biodiesel, not Hydrogen by Geomisk · · Score: 2, Informative
    Although this Hydrogen boost is interesting, there is still a matter of the safe storage and distribution of hydrogen, as well as the trouble of getting pure hydrogen in the first place. Most of the processes of extracting hydrogen from other substances (i.e. water, natural gas, etc) take more energy to get the hydrogen than the hydrogen will release. At the present time I think our focus should be on a clean (not as clean as hydrogen of course) renewable fuel that requires no change in the existing fuel distribution and storage systems. That fuel is Biodiesel.

    Here are a few reasons Biodiesel is a better immediate solution.

    • Biodiesel requires no diesel engine modifications to run
    • The fuel infrastructure exists now. No modifications needed.
    • Mass production is very feasible
    • No net carbon dioxide emissions (if made with ethanol)
    • Renewable
    • For every 1 unit of energy used to make biodiesel 2.3 units are gained
    • In a modern diesel engine (VW TDI for example) there are fewer toxic emissions than in a gas/electric hybrid (Toyota Prius for example).
    For more info check out the fact sheets at biodiesel.org.
  77. I think these people are forgetting about... by Planx_Constant · · Score: 2, Insightful

    a little thing called thermodynamics. More specifically, the second law. You can't get more energy out than you put in. As a matter of fact, you can't even get back the same amount.

    --
    Heisenberg might have been here.
    1. Re:I think these people are forgetting about... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      - Solar cells
      - Wind turbines

      How much energy goes in?

    2. Re:I think these people are forgetting about... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is this like adding natural gas? Have yall ever heard of someone using a turbocharger and injecting natural gas as a "ADDITIVE" to boost horsepower and fuel effecentcy(sp). The slips my mind right now but I will try to find it.

  78. Stupid people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    First of all, a system that converts a fuel into hydrogen gas is called a reformer, not a fuel cell. A fuel cell converts hydrogen and oxygen into electricity.

    Second of all, electrolysis of water is SLOW. The amount of hydrogen being created is too little to make a difference in any engine. The authors of the pages are talking about making "gallons" of hydrogen. Remember high school chemistry? Any amount of gas will fill any volume. You have no idea how much you have unless you have a specific temperature and pressure. This is why gasses are sold by weight. Lets assume that gallon was stp. Now think of the cubic feet per minute of air that most cars run at. A small engine can consume 300 cfms of air. One system said it made a gallon (.13 cubic feet) of h2 per minute (I am assuming stp). Not significant.

    Also, check the "facts" of these pages. The guy selling the hydrogen-boost system has 0-60 times he made with a stopwatch, as if that was a true, scientific measure of gains. The funny part is, the more fuel milage/power increasing crap he installed, the higher (slower) his times were. Any performance "gains" he shows are way below the threshold of error, espically in a test like that.

    That home electrlyzer link is horrendous. Its called electrolysis, not electrolyzing. He demonstrates complete ignorance of simple ideas like V=IR, and the recommendation of adding battery acid to the water is pretty silly, when something like table salt is safer and easier.

    If you used electrolysis to make hydrogen, then compressed it, stored it in a cylinder, and injected it, yes you will get a lot better milage, and performance. You would have to have a lot of hydrogen though! Then again, propane is easier to come by, and works just as well.

  79. UK vs US Gallons by jdesbonnet · · Score: 2, Informative

    When working out your "mpg" remember:

    gallon (US) = 3.7854 litre
    gallon (UK) = 4.5460 litre

    So please state your units. Gallons is ambiguous. Better still... use metric.

    1. Re:UK vs US Gallons by Glonoinha · · Score: 1

      No wonder gasoline cost more per gallon in the UK - bigger gallons!

      Next time I go looking for a car and the salesman says 'which one do you want?' I will remember that whole fuel economy thing and answer something other than 'biggest one you got'

      A Mercedes 560SEL is a very nice ride, but I get a consistant 14mpg unless I spend my entire day on the freeway (in which case it jumps to a remarkable 16mpg.)

      That is almost 6km/liter. BAH!
      Still better than the 5km/liter my 1977 Corvette gets on a good day, more like 4km/l when I am having fun with it. Which is most of the time :)

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      Glonoinha the MebiByte Slayer
  80. See charts on page 7 by DaoudaW · · Score: 1

    For an easy answer to the original poster, see the charts on page 7 of the PDF. The efficiency of the engine never increases and sometimes decreases. The research is describing pollution control, not increased efficiency!!

    If _they_ only had a brain!!

  81. Biodiesel .... by s10god · · Score: 0

    Ok the purpose of the article is if useing a hydrogen device will increase milliage on a standard engine. NOT PURE FUEL CELL CARS!

    I have a few questions for all...
    Why is the media and the greenies avoiding the topic of biodiesel? http://www.biodiesel.org/
    Why do all alternative fuel vehicles have to be glorified golf carts? Whats the point in an electric car if the power source is a COAL power plant?

    Just wondering...

  82. When I replaced my Castrol by BigBadBri · · Score: 1
    with Snake Oil(TM), I got over 1000mpg when rolling downhill with the car in neutral!

    --
    oh brave new world, that has such people in it!
  83. What about cylinder temps? by Presence1 · · Score: 1
    One often-overlooked but critical functions of gasoline is to reduce cylinder temperatures. Aluminum melts at about 650C. Gasoline aerosols burn much hotter, depending on the mixture. Why don't the cylinders and pistons melt? Because of their thermal inertia and the liquid droplets of gasoline absorbing the heat from the previous cycle. This is why it is easy to burn a hole in a piston by running an engine too lean (although you do get more power until that point).

    I saw nothing about managing this effect in a quick read of the site, and it wouldn't surprise me to find that this might work well, until you burn your pistons.

    caveat emptor...

  84. be careful!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Running your engine lean is a *BAD* idea. The gas can prematurely explode, called detonation, and kill your engine!! So unless you have the cash to fork over if/when something goes wrong...

    Also, even just using a pump to force air into the caburator like he did is of coirse going to lean out the mixture which produces better gas milage, just like a supercharger or something would w/o adding extra fuel. When you do this, things brake. So again, be VERY careful.

    As a side note, all honda ECU's (specially 5th gen prelude's like mine) run a little rich when you're on it, to keep things from going "BOOM" in different environments (higher elevations vs lower, etc, etc)... but at high-way cruising where engine demand is small, it trims it back running as close to 14.1:1 w/o crossing that mark to help with fuel milage.

  85. try using AIR! by heiho1 · · Score: 1

    I've been hearing about cars which run on compressed air for some time. They are not, unsurprisingly, sold in the US...does anyone in a foreign country have access to an "air car"? If so, how well does
    it work?

    http://www.theaircar.com/

  86. Re:Hydrogen isn't ready... check out DIESEL by arkane1234 · · Score: 1

    Not to mention that diesel is just another petroleum product.

    The same limitations apply to diesel as do gasoline...

    --
    -- This space for lease, low setup fee, inquire within!
  87. Re:Hydrogen isn't ready... check out DIESEL by at_kernel_99 · · Score: 1
    Not to mention that diesel is just another petroleum product. The same limitations apply to diesel as do gasoline...
    Well, unless you count biodiesel. A net zero-emission fuel. More info at the National Biodiesel Board or at Veggie Van for homebrewed biodiesel from waste vegetable oil. All of which, of course, does not answer the initial question.
  88. The Show Restarter by virg_mattes · · Score: 1

    > A bigger show stopper is likely to be "where do I refuel it?"

    Then the big show restarter would be "a gas station". Without the hydrogen booster, your car would run normally, like it did before the mod. If you run out of hydrogen on the road, your fuel economy drops, but the car will keep running. Then, you reload the hydrogen system when you get to wherever you can fill it.

    Virg

    1. Re:The Show Restarter by realdpk · · Score: 1

      So then the question remains "Where do I refuel it with hydrogen?"

  89. Burning hydrogen instead of gasoline by Charcharodon · · Score: 1
    You can run hydrogen through an engine, but you'll run into the same obstical that the fuel cell vehicles have, hydrogen storage. It has to be compressed to 5000psi to get a reasonable amount on board. After that only thing you need is a regulator to control the flow from the tank. Mixing it with gasoline will do nothing for you since you just adding more fuel to an already incomplete combustion. You need more air to get more go out of your fuel.

    If you want to see a similar system that is actually affordable and is already in use across the US, check out propane or methane conversions for cars. Those fuels are easier to store, but use similar equipment that a hydrogen conversion would require. Most propane/methan conversions are dual fuel, so you are able to use gasoline or the alternate fuel.

    A very interesting alternate fuel is bio-diesel. Which is a simple process (lye+veg oil+methanol) that converts vegtable/animal fat oils into a diesel equivalent. The midwest of the US uses it as fuel additive. Content ranges from 20-100%. Burning it straight will not hurt a diesel engine. The nice thing is diesels get much better fuel economy are very powerfull, are inexpensive and readily available. If we "grow" our own fuel then the CO2 would be cycled instead of released. Farmers would benefit and "foreign oil" would be an issue of corn or soybeans instead crude. Something even the poorest country could produce. A "oil spill" wouldn't be as environmentally destructive and would bio-degrade in a matter of days. The funny thing is the guys that have been promoting use resturant oil so their vehicle exhaust smells like fries or onion rings.

    1. Re:Burning hydrogen instead of gasoline by DuckDodgers · · Score: 1

      Someone brings this up every frickin' time.

      Biodiesel is a great idea. We have the plant waste, we should use it productively.

      But to supply all of our current petroleum needs with biodiesel, the entire damn country would have to be one fat biodiesel farm. Look up the stats, the estimates are ~~ 96% of land mass would need to be diverted to making biodiesel.

      Biodiesel will help, but it won't solve our petroleum dependency by itself.

    2. Re:Burning hydrogen instead of gasoline by juhaz · · Score: 1

      "Reasonable amount", for fuel supplement would be at least ten times lower than burning hydrogen for the only fuel, and the pressure requirements would be directly proportional to that.

      You may very well be right in that the o2 is limiting factor in internal combustion engines and this wouldn't do much good. But isn't that why the carburetor is there? So the engine can decide what's good fuel/air ratio instead of forced 50/50 with way too little oxygen.

  90. War and Energy by zymano · · Score: 0
    We see more and more of these topics everytime there is war against an energy producing country.

    I just want to remind some of you that the IRAQ conflict has nothing to do with oil.

    The Saudi royal leaders that gave Bin Laden some cash , maybe you have something then.

    Ethanol, methanol before hydrogen. Fuel cells are a good idea.

    Steam power would also be a good idea. No reliance one energy source.

  91. 100% hydrogen vehicles are made... by sagan78 · · Score: 1

    A friend of mine who happens to keep up with these sorts of things told me that in Canada, public service vehicles, like city buses are using hydrogen based fuel. These aren't hybrid vehicles, but 100% based hydrogen. They must have a lot of power to run a bus. I'd imagine you don't see these mass produced for after market people because how are you going to convince every Joe blow Mom and Pop gas station to start buying Hydrogen Fuel, and Install a Hydrogen fuel pump, when at first, they won't have many customers. But maybe you can get some info from some Canadian resources.

  92. Hydrogen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The problem with Hydrogen cars is that the cost and energy required to produce the hydrogen cancells out the effeciency gain of using it in the first place. Until hydrogen can be produced efficiently the "cell" is mearly a pipe dream.

  93. Ummm - Randy Racer here with today's tip ... by Glonoinha · · Score: 1

    >Ever heard of Nitrous Oxide (NO2)? Used in racing to help increase the performance of the vehicle, works by cooling the air (making it denser - more air - therefore more O2 - through the carb) before it enters the carb, does not burn or otherwise directly enhance POWER,

    Actually this is about 100% wrong. Bonus points for correct grammar and spelling, nice use of paragraphs, but completely devoid of facts.

    Regular air is about 80% inert gases and about 20% oxygen. Mix that with gasoline and roughly 1/5th of the volume of the air in the fuel to air mix is oxygen - the part that actually lets the gasoline burn.

    NO2 is about 66% oxygen by volume, therefore increasing the amount of oxygen available for the combustion by a factor of 3 ... creating a much more efficient and powerful burn of the gasoline - which is why it increases the power.

    Has nothing to do with the temperature of the air, although I have seen systems that have a tub to put in dry ice (frozen CO2, really cold) near the air intake to cool the entire assembly down to get the effect you are describing - it is good, but nowhere near as effective as dumping NO2 directly into the intake like a NOs fogger. The dry ice rig has been seen on machines with blowers on them as the blowers tend to heat the incoming air quite a bit (friction within the blower heats the blower, the blower heats the air.) Not to mention it gets hot in Bonnieville on the salt flats.

    --
    Glonoinha the MebiByte Slayer
    1. Re:Ummm - Randy Racer here with today's tip ... by SillySlashdotName · · Score: 1

      Amazing what you don't know when you think you know what you are talking about, isn't it! I was going from memory, and my knowledge of NO2 is from the '60s and '70s - NO2 IN CARS, YOU FREAKS!

      From Molecule of the month:

      At room temperature, N2O is quite unreactive with most substances, including alkali metals, halogens, and even ozone. It is therefore widely used as a propellant in aerosol cans in place of the CFCs which can damage the ozone layer. When heated sufficiently, however, N2O decomposes exothermically to N2 and O2. If this reaction occurs in the combustion chamber of an automobile, 3 moles of gas would be produced from 2 moles, providing an extra boost to the piston, as well as liberating more heat. It also has a number of other benefits. The increased oxygen provides more efficient combustion of fuel, the nitrogen buffers the increased cylinder pressure controlling the combustion, and the latent heat of vaporisation of the N2O reduces the intake temperature. (my emphasis) Therefore N2O is occasionally injected into the fuel lines of racing cars to give more power to the engine and to give the car exceptional acceleration.


      >Ever heard of Nitrous Oxide (NO2)? Used in racing to help increase the performance of the vehicle, works by cooling the air (making it denser - more air - therefore more O2 - through the carb) before it enters the carb, does not burn or otherwise directly enhance POWER,

      Actually this is about 100% wrong. Bonus points for correct grammar and spelling, nice use of paragraphs, but completely devoid of facts.

      Would you consider 95% wrong? How about 97%? Hey, I almost got a fact, there, that should count for something!

      Somebody mod this guy up, he is much closer to right (97%? 98%?) than I am.

      --
      Acts of massive stupidity are almost never covered by warranty. --me.
  94. Dissapointed with slash dotters. by gurps_npc · · Score: 1
    More than 50% of you misunderstood the issues here.

    1) The system has NOTHING to do with alternative fuels. We are talking fuel additive.

    2) The system is claiming increased efficiancy and increased power. Neither one of these claims is prima facia negated by the fact that things are being added or the fact that the fuel must be manufactured by the hydrolisis machine.

    Power is the easiest to understand - if the engine is now capable of providing more energy bursts, even if it uses up more gallons of gas to do so, it is a success. If a single combustion cycle provides more energy than it is succesful, even if the engine has to spend 2 hours creating electricity to generate the hydrogen first.

    Efficiancy is harder to understand. Basically if the alternators are properly designed, through normal use they will generate excess electricity beyond what the car needs. This energy is WASTED - untill the complex hydrolis system presented is used to recapture that waste energy.

    In other words, this device is theoretically useful, assuming that

    A) Hydrogen is not damaging to the engine and

    B) Hydrogen in the fuel increases the power or efficency of the combustion cycle more than a similar amount of gasoline would.

    --
    excitingthingstodo.blogspot.com
  95. intake cooling from water injection by snarkasaurus · · Score: 2, Informative

    Water injection is used to cool the intake air in supercharged aircraft engines. Kind of like an intercooler but cheaper and lighter.

    It makes use of water's heat of vaporization to reduce the fuel/air mixture temperature before it goes into the cylinder, and it reduces the chances of detonation (knocking)under high intake pressures. Also cleans the plugs and valves rather nicely. One problem, water is not compressible like air is, so you can blow your engine big time with too much water injection. BOOM.

    Incidentally, adding hydrogen to the intake won't accomplish squat, except possibly jack up the chamber temperature. Not what you want in a long distance engine.

    What you do want is more oxygen, so adding a supercharger or turbocharger to compress the intake charge is good, or possibly nitrous (NOS for you rice heads out there) for a bit of extra kick.

    Trying to inject pure oxygen just drives the temperature up to acetalene torch temperatures. That's rocket territory, reciprocating engines can't survive that kind of heat. Plus the violence of the combustion makes detonation knock look like a pat on the head from Grandma. BOOM!

  96. Here's an interesting question for mech geeks by dlakelan · · Score: 1

    What are the real barriers to creating a modern gas turbine powered
    hybrid?

    Gas turbine engines can burn just about any reasonable fuel, including
    methanol/ethanol, methane, CNG, diesel, gasoline, and soforth. They do
    it efficiently, probably similar to diesel. They have fewer moving
    parts, and are more amenable to computer control. They work best at
    constant speed, and therefore are great when used in hybrid
    configuration.

    Ceramics research since the 80s or so have produced high quality high
    temperature ceramics materials that require little machining for
    example at ORNL (at one point I wanted to be a ceramics engineer).

    Gas turbine engines need not make a lot of noise. In fact you can buy
    them as smallish backup generators.

    The main thing as far as I can tell is that the infrastructure isn't
    in place (parts, repair centers, etc). But it would be a lot easier to
    ship out some parts and run some repair training than to convert every
    gas station in america to something other than petroleum products.

    In terms of emissions, efficiency, power, and ability to use multiple
    fuels (an hence oil independence), the gas turbine and hybrid electric
    drivetrain seems like the way to go.

    Chrysler built some back in the 50s and 60's but as near as I can tell most
    of the problems would be solved with ceramic parts and a hybrid
    electric configuration.

    --
    ((lambda (x) (x x)) (lambda (x) (x x))) http://www.endpointcomputing.com a scientific approach to custom computing.
    1. Re:Here's an interesting question for mech geeks by Hardwyred · · Score: 1

      While Im not the engineer that you seek, I do have a thought or two on this. I think the biggest problem would be the torque drivetrain issue. Those little turbines are great at producing torque once they are at their most efficient level, but horrible when spooling up. So, you would have to set the engine to it's most efficient setting and then make the drivetrain handle the acceleration and that means CVT. CVT's, while in a few cars from Honda and Audi, aren't mainstream at all, and as I remember, still have some drawbacks like rubber banding and not being able to handle a lot of power (chain snaps). So, as a guess, I would say the engine itself is a drawback when coupled to a strong drivetrain, and I don't think a drivetrain exists yet to handle these engines when they are used in a CVT setup.

      --
      www.linux-skunkworks.com
    2. Re:Here's an interesting question for mech geeks by dlakelan · · Score: 1

      If you're using the engine to directly drive the transmission this would be an issue. But if you're using the engine to generate electricity for a hybrid setup, or using a hybrid setup that only spins up the engine during highway miles or some similar thing, then you can run the engine only at optimal speed and have a simple centrifugal clutch or something.

      I can totally understand why you wouldn't want a turbine to replace a diesel or gasoline engine connected to a traditional drivetrain, but I can't see why you wouldn't want a turbine to generate electricity or cruising highway torque for a hybrid.

      --
      ((lambda (x) (x x)) (lambda (x) (x x))) http://www.endpointcomputing.com a scientific approach to custom computing.
  97. Magnagas by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think we should look at magnegas first due to the storage requirements,etc for hydrogen.
    Try: http://www.usmagnegas.com/

  98. Hydrogen by KrisHolland · · Score: 1

    They are learning how to make synthetic fossil fuels, that is the future! Kris http://www.geocities.com/zainzoo/

  99. Subaru WRX STi - Re:Hydro boost from water vapor? by Michael_Rose · · Score: 1

    The new Subaru WRX STi has a water sprayer.

    "The large capacity intercooler includes a manually operated water spray feature to provide additional cooling."

    http://impreza.subaru.com/microsites/impreza/wrx st i/wrxsti.jsp

  100. Re:Hydrogen isn't ready... check out DIESEL by boskone · · Score: 1

    I would kill to see more diesel tech in the US. I would love a midsize SUV (read that as Grand Cherokee or Explorer sized) that had an efficient turbo diesel.

    The diesels of today are reliable, trouble free, get great mileage, and are quiet and powerfull. But, americans still remember the bad old days of 70's diesels that were loud, unreliable, etc.

    OK detroit, here's the deal. I will write a check the day you deliver what I want. otherwise I'll stick with BMW coupes (in gasoline, alas)

  101. Of course it would by Transcendent · · Score: 1

    It's simple chemistry. The main components in the combustion process within a car engine is the hydrogen from the hydro-carbon, and the oxygen in the air. Give it a spark, and you get some nice energy output.

    The timing of the car depends on the octane level of the gas. If you have a higher octane level, the gas burns slower, but hotter.

    If you replace the carbon/hydrogen bonded molecules with pure hydrogen, you won't have to have so much energy to overcome breaking the C-H bonds (burn faster), and you'll get a much much much much higher energy output. Get the ratio of 2hydrogen atoms for every oxygen, and you get the perfect combustion setup with pure water as your "exhaust" (and you wont have CO2 being expelled either... just pure water).

    The reason we don't have pure hydrogen/oxygen burning internal combustion cars is because it would be TOO powerful... the fuel misture injected per stroke would be too delicate to control within a safe error range, so sticking to something much safer (our present gas) allows us to not worry about the fuel mixtures as much.

  102. Not my experience.. by Manic+Miner · · Score: 1

    Hmmmm, thats odd not that daewoo have had a perfect service history, but I've had things replaced - like a new clutch cable, which they had in stock, along with new break pads. I've also had it broken into they got a new lock, with correct lock barrel for my key, in 1 week. They've sucked in other ways but no more than any other manufacturer that I have owned cars from ;)

    --
    If you ever drop your keys into a river of molten lava, let'em go, because, man, they're gone.
    1. Re:Not my experience.. by Fat+Casper · · Score: 1
      You're damn lucky.

      I'm the parts guy. My dealership used to sell Daewoos. There's nothing wrong with the cars except that the company fell out from under them. They aren't as back ordered as they used to be, but it's not a scene you want to get involved in.

      --
      I spent a year in Iraq looking for WMD and all I found was this lousy sig.
  103. Someone thinks fries stink by Charcharodon · · Score: 1
    Nothing will solve our petroleum dependency by itself. Hell hydrogen won't help, because guess where the cheapest place to get hydrogen from is, hmmm oil maybe. A large chunk of all that wonderful new research money is most likely targeted towards stripping hydrogen from oil.

    The only reason I brought up biodiesel is it would be an excellent solution to break our dependency on imported oil. I say let the middleast choak on their oil.
    As far as providing all our oil, yes it would most likely outstip our present farming capabilities, though I doubt it would take 96% of our land mass to do it. The author of the book I got the info from acknoledges the limitations. His take on it is biodiesel is fairly cheap to make, considering somewhere in the neighboor of 3 billion gallons of cooking oil and 300 million tons of animal fats (also a source for biodiesel) are dumped in the landfills every year. Quite a bit of useable energy in that, might as well make good use of it.

  104. Oxygen is what is needed. by Charcharodon · · Score: 1
    Why bother adding the hydrogen when what you need is more oxygen. It would take a lot of extra plumbing to make it work not to mention fairly large storage tanks. It wouldn't be worth the extra hassel of having to gas up with two fuels and the extra weight. You would see a greater return by adding a turbo, switching to an electric/gas hybrid or making the car out of lighter materials. If you're going to go through all the trouble you might as well burn straight hydrogen or better yet methane. Methane is much easier to come by, handle, and store.

    Also carburetor's don't "decide" anything, they are adjusted and then operate according to that adjustment. Now on the other hand a fuel injection system, can adjust itself on the fly and compensate according to what it's sensors tell it, but it cannot magically force more air into the combustion chamber without outside help. Ram air scoups, blowers, or turbos help out, but all have their limitations. On top of that there is still the fact that air has only around 21% oxygen in it. Another popular strategy is the injection of Nitrous-oxide into the system which artificial increases the available oxygen. Only problem there is heat and nitrogen polutants issues. Theoretically I guess you could run 100% O2 using liquid oxygen to completely combust all available fuel, but I've never heard of anyone doing that before. Maybe it has something to do with the fact that the metals that make up the engine itself tend to start to burn in a high temp 100% oxygen atmosphere. On the other hand if they could get that to work (make the parts out of ceramics) then you might see a big jump in fuel economy, and not to mention some crazy power.

    1. Re:Oxygen is what is needed. by sjames · · Score: 1

      Also carburetor's don't "decide" anything, they are adjusted and then operate according to that adjustment.

      That is true for the carburetor itself, but in late '80s vehicles (before fuel injection took over), the onboard computer controls the carburetor's adjustment dynamically.

      Technology to premix air into a fuel gas is as old as the bunsen burner. In this case, it's simpler. Modern engines run lean (with an excess of air) to prevent raw hydrocarbon emissions and improve mileage. So at least some hydrogen can be provided at the air intake without a problem

      In fuel injected vehicles, there is a density sensor on the air intake to assist in computing the optimal amount of fuel to inject. That provides a likely control point to re-compute for a hydrogen enriched air intake.

      The real question is will it be better than water aspiration (YES, water). Water aspiration cools the intake air and with appropriate fuel mixture adjustments can result in better fuel efficiency and reduced emissions. It also helps to prevent detonation problems associated with running low octane fuel. That might be especially beneficial for a turbocharged engine.

      As a mixed fuel, I would think hydrogen in a gasoline engine would be a problem without also aspirating water (detonation is hell on a gasoline engine's valves). Hydrogen would seem to make more sense in a diesel engine, especially in a cold climate.

      The plumbing is not actually that complicated for any of this. As a retrofit, it's a lot simpler than trying to do a hybrid conversion.

      Of course, a very simple mod is to run gasohol. Some brands of gasoline currently are actially 10 percent ethanol now. It runs just fine.

  105. Re:Alternative fuels are very sexy,but..Fisher pri by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The plastic in the car is where most of the polution is, not the fuel!!!! Build the car out of a product that has the most environmental production method and you are far better off. Or better yet, build a vehicle that will last >3x longer than current vehicles and you save just that much more than building a cheap plastic POS electric/hybrid crapola car... Gimme a '73 super beetle and some NOS....

  106. Road Warrior by Latent+Heat · · Score: 1
    While the film Road Warrior was science-fiction fantasy, it was rather heavy in its emphasis of things automotive, and I always thought that it provided a glimpse of the Australian "motor-head" culture, similar in many ways to U.S car culture but with its own Australian flavor.

    So in the plot to Road Warrior, this is supposed to be a post-nuclear war society where gasoline is very scarce apart from quantities stashed away by various tribal groups. So tell me, if gasoline is such a precious commodity, why are people driving around the Outback with big-block V-8 engines, superchargers, NOS systems and the like?

    1. Re:Road Warrior by BladeMelbourne · · Score: 1

      Hmm, I doubt about the prevalence of NOS systems, superchargers or V8 engines. Granted, I live very south on the mainland. (The ouback is the north-west of the continent).

      There are many idiots who extend their phallus by purchasing 6/8 cylinder vehicles and modding them and wasting money. It's not as if they get to their destination any faster... unless they break the speeding laws. And they are still under the impression that these cars assist in their efforts to get layed. I think between the ages of 14 and 32 there is too much blood going to the groin (as opposed to the brain) in Australian men.

      They rev their engines, and make their tyres squeal taking corners. I laugh at them. Especially when they take off when the lights turn green and I catch up to them at the next red lights in my Hyundai Excel.

  107. NO2 + Motorcycle = RocketShip by Glonoinha · · Score: 1

    Everything I learned about NOs I learned from the guys that had it on their race bikes. There I was on my 500 Interceptor (could smoke any other 500 or 550 out there (four stroke, couldn't compete with the two strokes) and keep pretty close to the 600 Ninjas ... and these guys pull up with Suzuki 1150ES bikes with a blue bottle the size of a gallon milk jug bolted to the side.

    The horn did double duty, and one of the guys had an orange 'Remove before flight' streamer on the pin he kept in his to keep from accidently tapping it before he was damn well ready.

    Like all good hackers, you have this uncanny knack of seeing something and just storing it away, bringing it back two or three years later when Voila! it becomes noteworthy :) Yaya, I rescind my 100% to roughly 90%.

    Last note - when the thing you quoted said that NO2 doesn't react with most substances at room temperature, it implies -unless there is a spark- ... meaning as a gas or as a liquid it doesn't oxidize things like H2O2 (Hydrogen Peroxide) or H2NO3 (Nitric Acid) might ...

    --
    Glonoinha the MebiByte Slayer
  108. Ethanol, great yet so underutilized by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My car has a sticker on the gas tank that says that it will run on ethanol fuel (probably to get around some federal regualtions on gas milage)...

    I saw this guy on the Sunday Morning show on CBS and he converted all his vehicles to run on ethanol.

    The upshot was that his fuel cost was next to nothing because he produced his own ethanol using "waste" corn stalks that he got from farmers after the corn was picked!

    Who needs gas?

    Why the hell aren't we doing more stuff like this? Oh yeah, it's because a bunch of rich guys like Bush would lose a bunch of money, so there's no economic incentive...

  109. 27-30MPG highway in '84 K5 Blazer w/diesel by SaDan · · Score: 1

    Yup. My current daily driver is an unmodified '84 K5 Blazer 4x4 with the GM 6.2L NA diesel. On the highway it will average around 27MPG, with 30MPG peak average for extended trips.

    I drive 160 miles a day for my daily commute (round trip, all highway miles), and can go a week on one tank (31 gallons).

    Compare that with any new SUV or light truck. I know I'm happy with my beat up K5!

    To save myself even more $$$, I'm going to try and buy a used Chevy Sprint this weekend. Should be in the 50MPG range, and this car's not even fuel injected!

  110. Hey Europeans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You can shut the fuck up about how your gas has cost twice as much as ours for decades, too. You have decent diesel engines; we have Hummers, a couple of overpriced pickup trucks and those shitty 90bhp Volkswagens. You have decent microcars; our Mini Cooper, for reasons beyond comprehension, gets no better mileage then a well-engineered midsize car. And the Suzuki Swift is discontinued, not that it was anywhere near as good as a Renault or Fiat in the first place.

    Cars suck anyway. Ride a bicycle.

  111. I don't understand where the energy comes from by Drummer_Dan · · Score: 0

    Let me get this straight...

    1. Your battery is used to split the water
    2. The added hydrogen creates a better gas mileage
    3. Your car tries to recharge the battery
    4. Your battery gradually dies from the added task of electrolysis, and the loss of the energy transfer from the engine to generator to battery.

    So, is the better gas mileage coming from the battery? (or gas if it's used to recharge the battery)
    It seems that it should decrease gas mileage from all the added superfluous energy transfers..

    The other thing to argue is that he gives (or claims to give) real working examples. He mentioned that his dad and a friend had a working booster, and gave data (although not detailed) about the gas mileage of each.

    And why would you even need acid? All the acid seems to do is react with the electrodes. This is electrolysis, not a reaction with the acid and water. Which reminds me, Wouldn't you need to add water to the canister because of the loss of the gases?

    So does it work or not? He claims it does, but it dosne't seem like it should.

    --
    -- When all else fails, read the instructions --
  112. Something along these lines... by brandon87 · · Score: 1

    A teacher at my highschool remembers when he was in college that there were a couple of college students that invented a vehicle that ran around 60miles on 1 cylinder of gas...the secret to conserving so much gas was lost...my guess is that some oil company bought the remains of what was built and gave the sell-outs enough money to shut up about the whole idea...if anyone else has heard something similar to this just let me know all the details

  113. Iceland by hether · · Score: 1

    Take a look at Iceland's initiative to go to all hydrogen powered vehicles. Do a search for "Iceland's Hydrogen Economy" to find all sorts of info on how hydrogen is working for them and their bid to convert their country completely by 2030-40. They'll open their first hydrogen filling station in April of this year, starting with some of their bus lines using it, and eventually plan to convert their fishing fleet, etc. Some amazing stuff really.

    Some other good links are:
    American Hydrogen Association
    and
    Fuel Cells Explained

    --

    Most people would die sooner than think; in fact, they do.
  114. Re:Subaru WRX STi - Re:Hydro boost from water vapo by tmonkey · · Score: 0

    this is simply to cool off the intercooler so the air going into the engine is coler. this does not get sprayed into the engine