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BMW Shows Off World's Fastest Hydrogen Car

loid_void writes "According to Reuters and others BMW unveiled the world's fastest hydrogen-powered car at the Paris auto show on Wednesday, dubbed the H2R, capable of exceeding 300 kilometers (185 miles) per hour. The are also working with Shell on hydrogen dispensing stations. '"Our drive toward the future is called hydrogen," BMW management board member Burkhard Goeschel said before the tarp slowly slipped off the teardrop-shaped body of the sleek race car.' All I want to know, does it come with an iPod hookup?"

5 of 400 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Isn't - by at_18 · · Score: 5, Informative

    Does anyone remember the Hindenberg?

    Hydrogen was not the cause for the Hindenberg disaster. Hydrogen burns without any visibile flame or smoeke. In the Hindenberg case, what burned was the external paint, which had a chemical composition quite similar to nitroglicerine (it wasn't known at the time).

    Even more sad, most the deaths from that disaster were people jumping down while the ship was still in the air. Most of those who remained in the airship survived.

  2. Re:Isn't - by csguy314 · · Score: 5, Informative

    Actually, with the hydrogen being in stable fuelcells,

    Ahhh, good old /., where people feel compelled to post before rtfa. The car doesn't use fuel cells for the engine. It's an hydrogen combustion engine.
    The article says that BMW is researching fuel cells as well, but it's concentrating on combustion engines "because the sum total of its features and characteristics offers the largest number of advantages and benefits all in one."

    --
    This is left as an exercise for the reader.
  3. Re:next step... by Depris · · Score: 5, Informative

    Somebody already invented a car that was cheap and lasted a lot longer than conventional parts. He died broke when all the car companies lobbied against him because of the economic consequences.

    Their was also a movie by Francis Ford Coppla about him with Jeff Bridges:

    http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0096316/

    --
    I'll make you a deal. You pray to God for help and I'll stop the moment he shows up.
  4. Re:Actually by MtViewGuy · · Score: 5, Informative

    While the coating compenents were potentially reactive, they were separated by a layer of material that should have inhibited the reaction from starting.

    Alas, the Wikipedia article forgot one aspect: the mounting bolts for the canvas covering were made of steel, which allowed a static discharge to move through the canvas covering VERY quickly. Because the Hindenberg had flown near a thunderstorm just before the explosion, there was a buildup of static electricity on the entire airship and when it discharged the mounting bolts transmitted the static discharge, causing a large portion of the canvas covering to literally explode on the initial explosion.

    That's why on the short-lived airship Graf Zeppelin II (LZ 130), the Zeppelin engineers switched to bronze mounting bolts for the canvas covering, so the static discharge would not be transmitted through the mounting bolts.

    By the way, the Zeppelin company actually produced an internal report about the Hindenberg explosion and that report cited issues with the potential flammability of the canvas covering doping compound. Alas, that report was quickly surpressed by the Nazi government for various reasons.

  5. Re:Survivors? by AlinuxNCSU · · Score: 5, Informative

    Google "hindenburg survivors" perhaps? I mean, come on, there are links on the first results page! They might not give you the number of survivors, but they definitely confirm that there were some.

    For the lazy:

    http://www.airships.net

    http://www.vidicom-tv.com/hindenburg/making_of.htm

    http://www.authentichistory.com/audio/1930s/histor y/19370506_Hindenberg_Disaster_Herb_Morrison-short .html

    -Alex