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100-MPG Air-Powered Car Headed To US Next Year

An anonymous reader sends us to Popular Mechanics for word on a New York automaker with plans to introduce a US version of the air-powered car, with which India's Tata Motors made a splash last year. Zero Pollution Motors plans a sub-$18,000, 6-passenger vehicle that can hit 96 mph and gets over 100 MPG, using an untried dual engine — the air-powered motor being supplemented by a second (unspecified) engine that would kick in above 35 MPH. The company estimates that "a vehicle with one tank of air and, say, 8 gallons of either conventional petrol, ethanol, or biofuel could hit between 800 and 1000 miles." The vehicle could be introduced to the market as early as 2009.

12 of 449 comments (clear)

  1. I'm skeptical by jandrese · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Those are some rather extravagant claims for a technology that appears to be about half thought out (what if we put an engine of some kind on an air car!). My gut reaction is that they pulled that MPG number and top speed straight out of their ass.

    --

    I read the internet for the articles.
  2. Interesting concept by KublaiKhan · · Score: 4, Interesting

    A bit different than the usual 'hybrid' gas/electric design.

    I'd like to know how the air tank would be refilled, though. I mean, gas stations already have air compressors for your tires, but would that put out enough pressure to fill the tank in your car?

    Or will this strictly be an 'around town' sort of car, and you'd have to rent something for long trips?

    --
    In Xanadu did Kubla Khan
    A stately pleasure dome decree
    1. Re:Interesting concept by yog · · Score: 3, Interesting

      The air car may herald a whole new era in energy currency. Far from being a specialized and refined product extracted from the ground at great cost, air is freely available, and the stored potential energy of the vehicle is created by a pump. We will start to look at stored energy as the currency rather than a high energy liquid like gasoline.

      Imagine a barter system in the future where we might have to get on an exercycle type of machine to pump up an engine. The local diner might charge either $10 for a meal or one hour on the pump. Homeless and working poor could thus eat for the cost of an hour's exercise.

      If you run out of gas in the middle of nowhere, just get out the pump from the accessory compartment in the trunk, hook it up, and start pedalling. After 3-4 hours of fat burning cardiovascular workout, you will have enough stored energy to move your car 20 miles down the road to the service station. And as an added bonus, you'll be in fantastic shape!

      Buildings could hook up pumps to revolving doors as a way to "steal" energy to power their lighting systems, etc. Even the floors might consist of pistons hidden under the carpet that are compressed as you walk on them. Walking down a hall would feel like climbing a stair, something the health newsletters advise us to do more often anyway.

      Of course, people in windy areas would probably want to use windmills to directly pump up our cars overnight.

      It's interesting stuff to think about.

      --
      it's = "it is"; its = possessive. E.g., it's flapping its wings.
  3. Rental by bigattichouse · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I think the only way they'd get past the "burp-car" or "fart-car" stigma would be to start offering them as rental cars - let people drive them around a lot. Then they might have a market. (Unless they just come in at $2500 - then they'll sell a billion of them)

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    meh
  4. Re:Easy by electrictroy · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I've already got a car that gets close to that:
    - Honda Insight - 80-90 mpg in real world I-95 driving (mine)

    Volkswagen is also building a car that will get 240mpg, although it's only a two-seater. It will arrive late 2009 (europe), and hopefully hit the U.S. sometime shortly after.

    --
    The government is not your daddy. Its purpose is not to raid middle-class neighbors' wallets and give it to you.
  5. Energy state conversion by Dzimas · · Score: 3, Interesting

    OK, so you use an electric engine to drive a compressor which then drives the wheels. Or - even worse - you'll use a gasoline engine to compress the air. It's true that you'll get "zero pollution" while driving, but this vehicle is going to use significantly more energy than a vehicle that uses an electric or gasoline engine to drive the wheels directly. And that means *more* pollution, not less. There is a reason that we don't use compressed air to anything larger than toy cars and rockets - it has an incredibly low energy density compared to a tankful of hydrocarbon-based fuel.

    This is yet another "clean energy" idea that preys on the naieve.

  6. Is it really cheaper? by Iberian · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Say instead we took the same car and replaced the engine with a small 1.2 litre diesel. Now calculating in the cost of the compressed air and comparing it to the cost of diesel to go 1000 miles which is cheaper?

    May even debate which is greener considering that the compressed air didn't jump in the tank itself

  7. Re:Ugh by Midnight+Thunder · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Why do they have to make the friendly cars so damn ugly?

    Maybe because they aren't really giving high priority to the market or feel that the "environmental hippies care more about function than looks". Truth is, the there is a growing market of "environmental hippies" that have both money and sense of style. Maybe its time they took some of their industrial designers off their 10 tonne Enviro Pollution Vehicles and actually applying them to making environmentally friends vehicles which look good.

    In short: yup, I agree with you :)

    --
    Jumpstart the tartan drive.
  8. Has anyone ever seen this thing? Vaporware? by Animats · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Is there a drivable prototype of this thing? Has anyone from Motor Trend or Auto Week ever had a good look at it? For any real car, the prototypes precede volume production by several years.

    Accusations of fraud are flying between the Air Car people.. Apparently there are two Air Car groups, and they don't get along.

    Tata Motors has nothing on their web site about the "air car". They do have a page of their concept cars, and the Air Car isn't on there. They're coming out with the Tata Nano, at $2500. The Tata Nano is conventionally powered. There's an electric version of the Tata Ace mini-truck, and those should be coming to the US this year. But there is no Air Car or "City Cat" from Tata that I can find.

    This looks like vaporware.

  9. Danger, Will Robinson by RealProgrammer · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I think Spielberg built a huge PR hill to climb for the litigious American market. Ever see Jaws? As Mythbusters showed, in the extremely unlikely event that an air tank ruptured, it would typically expirate rather explode. It would be difficult indeed to make the tank explode, but that's the image I have.

    A twist on that by which the energy industry could rake in profit is by declaring it unsafe to use compressed air. Instead only compressed CO2 or Nitrogen should be used, to avoid fire hazard.

    O'course, that kind of undermines efficiency for braking, which should best be done by compressing air. Maybe they could use two tanks and use the difference in potential (pressure) between the two in a closed system.

    --
    sigs, as if you care.
  10. Re:Easy by Gordonjcp · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I had a car which got 85mpg a few years ago - the Citroën AX 1.5D - which, unlike the Honda Insight, could actually take four adults and some shopping (although the two adults in the back had to be fairly small). It probably wasn't quite as safe in a crash as an Insight, but had the advantage that pedestrians and cyclists would hear you coming.

  11. Re:But.. by Sandbags · · Score: 5, Interesting

    From what I can research, the air tank will power the car, all by itself, for about 200Km. With a gas engine suppliment, this could be drastically extended, upwards of 400Km I would say is a fair (safe) estimate. The cars come with their own internal pump system that can run off household electricity, but it takes upwards of 4 hours to fill the tank, and assuming it operates like any other air compressor, it will be loud. The good news is high pressure canisters could refil your tank in 3 minutes or less. Houses would almost certainly have to be equipped with high pressure home filling stations. they won't take much room, could fill 2-3 cars at once, and given all day to refill. By burying them we could eliminate most of the noise. The heat generated compressing the air could even be used for hot water (or to supplement it) as a side effect.

    Creating high pressure air (4000+ PSI) generates heat. Filling a tank with uncompressed air takes time almost as much for safety as for the actual time to compress. Filling stations could bury high volume, high efficiency compressors, divert the heat using geothermal options, and eliminate the bulk of noise. You could fill up in 3-5 minutes by using pre-pressurized air from massive underground tanks, or even massive above-ground tanks in some areas. they'd cost a bit to install, but over 10 years would pay better returns than fossil fuel stations. At home, if you had a smaller version system, you could either make hot water, or put in geothermal capacitors. The benefit to geothermal would mean in some markets you'd never have to shovel your walkway in the winter again (use heat pipes under concrete to both dispurse heat and melt snow, lol)

    It's a bit dangerous though... carbon fiber tanks at 4000+ PSI... If one ruptuers, the force released could quite litteraly throw the car a few blocks. More likely, it would simply rupture, causing the car to act like a bomb, just without flames... Vapor expansion at this level could rip people and metal apart. these tanks need to be REALLY strong to be safe, adding significantly to vehicle weight, reducing storage space, and limiting fuel economy. Sure, we can make one that goes 800KM on a fill up and has room for 4 including luggage, but there's no way the motor safety guys are ever going to allow it on the streets...

    I'm skeptical. Keep them out of my country until there's 50,000 or more of them driving around. We'll see then how safe they are.

    Also, the vehicle itself is pollution free, but making the electricity to compress the air isn't. If we're moving in this direction we'll need a major investment in free energy sources like solar and wind. Also, compressing the air locally at filling stations requires power. a lot of power. We'll need a super conducting grid to make that happen (if we plan to use clean electricity instead of current local poewr plants). Of course, the same is true for electric cars.

    High pressure air can be trucked around easy engouh too. We don't have to make air at every filling station. We could have a few small locations around town and drive trucks from key points to filling stations. This may lower the cost and complexity a bit in favor of logistics.

    We'll wait and see.

    --
    There is no contest in life for which the unprepared have the advantage.