T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1469.1 | Must buy one immediately! | EEMELI::JMANNINEN | Untouchable | Mon Jun 17 1991 12:53 | 1 |
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1469.2 | Sounds good | BAHTAT::BAHTAT::HILTON | How's it going royal ugly dudes? | Mon Jun 17 1991 14:19 | 5 |
| Radio one had an interview with the guy.
To proved how clean it was he drank the waste water!!
Greg
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1469.3 | Unconvinced | HAMPS::LINCOLN_J | Where sheep dare | Mon Jun 17 1991 14:23 | 11 |
| It can't be as simple as this. It takes more energy to liberate
the hydrogen from the water than you get back when it's burnt.
Hydrogen production plants using 'spare' energy from various
power sources have existed for some time but mainly only use
the hydrogen as a convenient way of storing energy.
If this really is something new then it'll be sensational but
I remain a sceptic.
-John
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1469.4 | | NEARLY::GOODENOUGH | | Mon Jun 17 1991 14:23 | 6 |
| Saw this on the front page of the Mail in the DEC shop (surprise surprise!)
Apparently it will run on *tap* water. Pity, 'cos as we all know, it
won't be long before tap water is more expensive than petrol - got to
pay the chief executives and build up the profits, you know ...
Jeff.
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1469.5 | What date is it??? April 1st? | MASALA::IJOHNSTON | Dib Dib Dib! | Mon Jun 17 1991 14:38 | 1 |
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1469.6 | Not April 1st but... | BAHTAT::DODD | gone to Helen's land | Mon Jun 17 1991 15:00 | 7 |
| I heard this on the radio. There was some sentence about storing the
hydrogen as a powder. This made no sense at all. Hydrogen is a gas and
if it is stored then is it being liberated in the car or not?
Given the guy's past history he isn't a crank but the claims were
somewhat unbelievable.
Andrew
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1469.7 | Remember Fleischmann & Pons? | NEARLY::GOODENOUGH | | Mon Jun 17 1991 15:10 | 3 |
| I'll bet this is cold fusion all over again :-)
Jeff.
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1469.8 | | NCEIS1::CHEVAUX | Patrick Chevaux, Nice, 828-6995 | Mon Jun 17 1991 15:11 | 1 |
| Hydrogen spontaneously explodes when compressed under 2 bars or more.
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1469.9 | | CHEFS::CLEMENTSD | So much to do...so little time | Mon Jun 17 1991 16:05 | 13 |
| RE .8
sorry, Patrick, but I got to disagree on that one. Hydrogen is normally
transported as a gas under pressure (look out for a truck/trailer that
consists of a rack of long thin cylinders all piped together and
painted bright red) of about 100-150 bar. It is sometimes transported
as a liquid, but if liquid is needed converted from the vapiour state
to the liquid state just before final use.
Maybe the hydrogen is being stored as a metal hydride, which if my
chemistry memory is not failing me, tend to be solids (of various
physical forms). This would react to give hydrogen gas which could fuel
a power cell ........
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1469.10 | It's nothing new | JANUS::BARKER | Jeremy Barker - T&N/CBN Diag. Eng. - Reading, UK | Mon Jun 17 1991 16:26 | 5 |
| Storing hydrogen as a metal hydride has been around for some time. One
of the up-market German manufacturers (BMW or Mercedes) has been running
cars powered on hydrogen stored as metal hydride for some time now.
jb
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1469.11 | A white powder | SQGUK::GRUBB | | Mon Jun 17 1991 18:10 | 5 |
| The interview on radio 4 this morning said that the
hydrogen would be stored very safely as a white powder
A car could be refuelled in 10 mins.
Does this give the chemists amongst you a clue?
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1469.12 | 50 mile long hosepipe ... | WARNUT::RICE | At last the GPX750 is back on the road... | Mon Jun 17 1991 18:17 | 17 |
| Re .10
from what I can make out from todays "Daily Mail" it does indeed store
the Hydrogen in a powdered metal form.
Apparently one plugs the car into the electric mains overnight (8
hours) which disassociates the water (not sure of the technical
details) the car then runs on the Hydrogen component during the day
(does it get the Oxygen from the Air ?) to produce water vapour as the
exhaust.
To my mind this is a bit like a battery only more efficient, it still
requires a Power Station burning fossil fuels/nuclear etc. somwhere in
the chain, so it doesn't just "run on water" as the mail would have us
believe.
Stevie.
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1469.13 | | PUGH::FRENCHS | Semper in excernere | Tue Jun 18 1991 11:19 | 12 |
| My understanding, from the mail, is this.
The gas is stored in a metal powder. To recharge the gas you plug into
the mains electricity. This is where the water bit comes in. If you
need to refuel on route the the gas can be pumped direct into the
battery, about a 5 or 10 minute job.
I think this will be better for the environment. You only get a one
stage burn of fossle fuels, ie at the power station to produce mains
electricity.
Simon
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1469.14 | | CHEFS::CLEMENTSD | So much to do...so little time | Tue Jun 18 1991 11:23 | 10 |
| re .13
haven't read the newspaper reports (bit difficult when you don't buy
any!) so am not able to comment on the technology/chemistry of this
offering but don't we get a single stage fossil fuel burn now, Simon?
ie in the car engine?
whatever it is if it's as good as it's made out to be, you can betcha
last barrel of oil that the oil companies will fight it all the way,
and if that doesn't work, the politicians will tax it to hell.......
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1469.15 | | SWEEP::PREECE | It's all right, they're only electrons.... | Tue Jun 18 1991 12:03 | 15 |
|
As I read it, you plug the car in to domestic mains overnight
(using an unspecified amount of power from your friendly local coal-burner),
and the fuel cell runs "in reverse" to produce free hydrogen from tap water
(how often do you have to get your car de-scaled?). The gas is stored
in a "porous metal powder" (hydride? - or a chemical "sponge" ?)
in a tank, and is then burned with air to run the car during the day.
I suppose there could be the equivalent of "economies of scale" , in the sense
that it should be a lot easier to keep one big power station clean than lots
and lots of private cars.......but watch the oil companies sabotage the idea...
Ian
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1469.16 | Feasibility + hype = BREAKTHROUGH! | DCC::HAGARTY | Essen, Trinken und Shaggen... | Tue Jun 18 1991 12:10 | 12 |
| Ahhh Gi'day...�
Yeah, BMW have been running Hydrogen with a Metal Hydride (Lithium?)
for some time. The big problem with it is that the Hydride takes a
LONG time to soak up any amount of the Hydrogen.
So they must use electricity (and some salt as an electrolyte) to
dissociate the hydrogen from the water, store it in Hydride, and the
next day it comes out when you open the valve. A nice side affect is
that the Hydrogen coming out will probably make the fuel cell cold, and
I assume you would have to pump some heat in to keep the reaction going
quickly enough. Good for an airconditioner.
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1469.17 | | NSDC::SIMPSON | There is no escape except to go forward | Tue Jun 18 1991 12:16 | 5 |
| Anyone tried using anhydrous water tablets - sounds just as plausible.
:-)
Steve
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1469.18 | | PUGH::FRENCHS | Semper in excernere | Tue Jun 18 1991 13:20 | 9 |
| Sorry I should have clariefied my comment of a single fuel burn. The power
stations will alway been in existance (well at least during my lifetime). I
take this as the first fossel fuel burn. To then use petrol to drive an engine
(or any other use) is a second fossel fuel burn. By using the produce from
the first use, ie mains electricity, to extract a fuel from a simple source,
eg water, you remove the need for petrol and there remove the second burn.
This in turn reduces the pollution.
Simon.
|
1469.19 | Not a con trick, but no good either | HAMPS::LINCOLN_J | Where sheep dare | Tue Jun 18 1991 13:28 | 21 |
| The modus operandi seems clear but the efficiency will be
very low.
Power stations are the most efficient method of converting
heat to power say 40%, twice as much as a car in normal
service.
By the time the electricity has been generated and distributed
some 10% is wasted so we get 90% of 40% = 36%.
If used in a pure electric car with say 75% efficiency the
overall effect is 27% which is pretty good, indeed better
than an ordinary car and with less polution.
However in this application the electricity is converted to
hydrogen at say 90% efficiency, and then used in a conventional
engine at 20%, overall effect = 6.5%. Summary, very expensive
to run and sounds complicated too.
-John
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1469.20 | | NEARLY::GOODENOUGH | | Tue Jun 18 1991 14:29 | 8 |
| Re: .18: Sorry, but your argument is fallacious, at least in part.
If all cars were converted, you would need a lot more power station
capacity, thus nullifying the savings on fossil fuel burn. It may also
be more efficient to concentrate the burn in the power station, but you
then introduce a loss in efficiency getting the power to the point of
use, i.e. via the transmission system.
Jeff.
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1469.21 | | PRFECT::PALKA | | Tue Jun 18 1991 16:36 | 9 |
| I believe there is some research going on into other means of hydrogen
productions. E.g. direct conversion from sunlight. This may not be
feasible on a domestic scale, but could produce hydrogen to be used to
fill up a tank at a filling station in the same way that petrol is used
today. (This would also allow governments to continue to tax the
consumption of motor fuel, which a domestic recharging facility would
make difficult !).
Andrew
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1469.22 | It's an electric car | MALLET::BARKER | Pretty Damn Cosmic | Tue Jun 18 1991 17:30 | 12 |
| From what I heard on the 'Today' programme on Radio 4 yesterday morning
there is a hydrogen fuel cell producing electricity that powers an electric
motor. Allegedly they can store enough hydrogen as a metal hydride to give a
range of 300 miles compared to the 50 miles of existing battery powered elctric
cars. The idea is that you recharge with hydrogen which is in turn produced
from water by electrolysis.
It does sound too good to be true. Only those companies involved in refining &
exploration will suffer. Everyon else e.g. car manufacturers, retail garages
etc. etc. should be able to carry on just as before.
Nigel
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1469.23 | | NEARLY::GOODENOUGH | | Tue Jun 18 1991 18:19 | 3 |
| ... and they'll probably end up calling it something like "C5"
Jeff :-)
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1469.24 | Like Water Off A Duck's... | ESDC2::MUDAN | Blame It On Your Karma... | Wed Jun 19 1991 09:10 | 3 |
|
What is the 0-60 rating [ in knots ? ;-]
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1469.25 | | HAMPS::LINCOLN_J | Where sheep dare | Wed Jun 19 1991 14:29 | 8 |
| Ah so now it uses a hydrogen fuel cell. Well that would
be much more efficient, but there is a snag namely that
these fuel cells are potential bombs.
If this development includes a safe fuel cell then it
may have potential.
-John
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1469.26 | | HUGS::AND_KISSES | Scott Marshall | Wed Jun 19 1991 14:46 | 5 |
| re potential bombs...
A tank of petrol is a pretty dangerous "potential bomb" too!
Scott
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1469.27 | It's not expl....BOOM... | WARNUT::RICE | At last the GPX750 is back on the road... | Wed Jun 19 1991 16:30 | 13 |
| re .26
>> A tank of petrol is a pretty dangerous "potential bomb" too!
Not really, petrol is not particularily dangerous as a liquid it needs
to be mixed with air at the correct ratio to be explosive.
I once knew someone who worked at the large refinery at Stanlow, one of
his party pieces was dropping a lighted match into a bucket full of
petrol and watching peoples faces, needless to say the flame was simply
extinguished !!!!
Stevie.
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1469.28 | BOOOOOOOOOOM | DCC::HAGARTY | Essen, Trinken und Shaggen... | Wed Jun 19 1991 16:43 | 4 |
| Ahhhh Gi'day...�
I've seen people do it with cigarette butts, I wouldn't try it with a
match.
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1469.30 | but | DCC::HAGARTY | Essen, Trinken und Shaggen... | Wed Jun 19 1991 16:55 | 3 |
| Ahhhh Gi'day...�
No flame.
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1469.31 | | SIEVAX::MIDONA | Alan Midona, SIE Reading, DTN 830 3996 | Mon Jun 24 1991 13:18 | 11 |
| Re: .27
>> Not really, petrol is not particularily dangerous as a liquid it needs
>> to be mixed with air at the correct ratio to be explosive.
From what I remember from my chemistry lessons, many moons ago,
the same thing is true for Hydrogen. Pure Hydrogen will not
burn, and is not explosive (well not at non-nuclear temperatures
anyway).
Alan.
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1469.32 | hydrogen + oxgen | METSYS::ZENTNER | It wasn't me ... | Mon Jun 24 1991 13:26 | 6 |
| Hydrogen is generally not too bad if it's not mixed with air !
If it does mix with air (oxygen) then thats when you get the
explosion risks.
Adam
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1469.33 | and I live near two or three of these. | PUGH::FRENCHS | Semper in excernere | Mon Jun 24 1991 13:49 | 11 |
| Serious rathole...
You have all seen the big gas holders that rise up and down depending on the
amount of gas in them. I was taling to a farely senior fireman friend of mine
who informed my that if a gas holder has a leek they just weld the hole,
with the gas still in it. If the gas catches on fire they just beat it out
with a towel like cloth.
Apparently the gas is at such a high concentrate it is very dificult to burn.
Simon
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1469.34 | Here we go again...? | FAILTE::ROBSONB | | Wed Apr 06 1994 11:49 | 18 |
|
I heard on the radio last week and again last night, a story
about the 'Myers Water Engine'. Apparantly Myers is an American
who has developed an engine which runs on water, and, according
to the news story, the product is to be launched here in the
UK in a few months with demonstrations including a water-powered
motor launch on the Thames, and water-powered aircraft at Heathrow.
Last night was 5th April, and a bit late for an April fool I thought,
but perhaps it was?
The radio interviewee couldn't give much detail on how it worked,
but he briefly mentioned 'extremely high voltage, low current' and
something about hydrogen.
Also mentioned were plans to launch DIY installation kits,
projected cost 1500ukp, to convert cars from petrol to water.
Has anyone else heard anything recently about this?
Brian
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1469.35 | Nice idea. | RDGE44::ALEUC1 | Barry Gates, 7830-1155 | Wed Apr 06 1994 12:26 | 16 |
| This car was also mentioned on the Horizon program about Cold Fusion
a couple of weeks ago. They had some footage of what appeared to be a
dune buggy-type thing that reputedly ran on water. It seemed to go like
a normal car although it wasn't running when the film crew turned up.
The chap who designed it managed to do it on a shoestring despite the
efforts of large motor manufacturers to buy out the patent. They also
said that other scientists thought it may not use energy from the water
but is just a way of transforming electrical energy into mechanical
energy.
So what? If its green and cheap I would drive one. The only problem I
can think of (if it really works!) is that water and iron do not go
together too well. The temptation is to poo-poo these radical ideas
as a money-making scam but I'll keep an open mind for now.
Barry.
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1469.36 | Sounds a bit like perpetual motion to me. | CMOTEC::POWELL | Nostalgia isn't what it used to be, is it? | Wed Apr 06 1994 13:37 | 0 |
1469.37 | | UPROAR::EVANSG | Gridlocked on the Info Highway | Thu Apr 07 1994 15:22 | 7 |
| I've heard that the way it works is that there's a _big_ battery
that's used to split the H2O into H2 + O (well, O2 actually) which
is then used to power the motor. The claims seem to be that he gets
more power out that is used by the battery but AKAIK he's not been
able to prove it.
The usenet group 'sci.skeptics' is probably the best one to watch
for this type of thing...
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1469.38 | | WELSWS::HEDLEY | Lager Lout | Thu Apr 07 1994 16:41 | 12 |
| > is then used to power the motor. The claims seem to be that he gets
> more power out that is used by the battery but AKAIK he's not been
> able to prove it.
I wasn't the most attentive student in my chemistry class, but I seem to
remember that the amount of energy used in ionisation is at least as much
as that released by the bonding of the separate molecules; taking into
account energy losses caused by inefficiency, the above claim looks a bit
shaky (unless I was asleep in class when some other aspect of molecular
chemistry was being covered :)
Chris.
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1469.39 | | LEMAN::CHEVAUX | Patrick Chevaux @GEO, DTN 821-4150 | Thu Apr 07 1994 17:13 | 2 |
| unless you get some free energy from somewhere (wind, sun, pressure
changes, ...)
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1469.40 | My chemistry may be a bit rusty tho' | RIOT01::SUMMERFIELD | Essex Man on the Info Highway | Thu Apr 07 1994 17:16 | 18 |
| re .38
There are two types of reaction, endothermic and exothermic. With an
endothermic reaction, more energy is required for the reaction to take
place than is subsequently released by the reaction. Conversely, an
exothermic reaction releases more energy than is input. The traditional
method for obtaining hydrogen from water is (if I remember rightly) an
endothermic process. However, the use of catalyst can modify the process
such that more energy is given out. The debate regarding cold fusion
research included a challenge that what was occuring was not "fusion" as
such, but rather a catalytic process.
Clive
PS A classic exothermic reaction is the thermite process involving
alternate oxidation and reduction of iron and aluminium. This
is used, for example, to weld long lengths of rail together for
railways.
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1469.41 | | GEMCIL::PW::winalski | Careful with that AXP, Eugene | Thu Apr 07 1994 19:34 | 16 |
| RE: .40
Hydrolysis of H2O to H2 and O2 is always endothermic. It can be coupled to
an even more highly exothermic reaction, however, to result in the release
of more energy than it takes to break the H-O bonds. But that is not
what's being talked about here. We're talking about electrolysis of H2O to
form H2 and O2, then combustion of the H2 and O2 to re-form H2O. This
cannot possibly release more energy than was originally present in the
battery, since formation of H2O from H2 and O2 releases exactly the same
amount of energy as is consumed when you hydrolyze H2O to H2 and O2, and
by the laws of thermodynamics, there is also energy lost as heat, random
motion, etc. You can't get out more energy than you put into a closed
system, and in fact you can't even get out the same amount as you put
in--you always get out less.
--PSW
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1469.42 | | PLAYER::BROWNL | RADARed on the Info Highway | Fri Apr 08 1994 09:41 | 7 |
| Ah yes, but is it possible that using a battery to break water into its
component parts and thence to drive an "engine", is a more efficient
way of powering a vehicle than simply powering an electric motor? Then,
could one not use the downhill "free" runs to charge the battery a
little, thus *greatly* extending the range possible per charge?
Laurie.
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1469.43 | | FORTY2::PALKA | | Fri Apr 08 1994 11:22 | 22 |
| re .42
How would you propose using the Hydrogen and Oxygen ? An electric motor
is moderately efficient. The losses involved in decomposing the water
are probably more than the losses in an electric motor, and that is
before you try to convert the power back to mechanical energy. A
combustion engine is less efficient than an electric motor.
Recharging the battery when going downhill, or just slowing down is a
useful technique, but would apply equally to an electric motor
solution.
The only thing I can think of is that you can get more energy stored in
a tank or hydrogen than in the same weight of battery, but I dont think
that would apply if you are carrying the means to generate your own
hydrogen.
If you only carry the hydrogen as a fuel then it may be more efficient
to use a fuel cell to convert it to electricity for an electric motor
than to burn it in an internal combustion engine.
Andrew
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1469.44 | The ultimate "green" lorry. | RDGE44::ALEUC1 | Barry Gates, 7830-1155 | Fri Apr 08 1994 15:38 | 16 |
| All this talk of water powered car has got me thinking of other
alternative methods for powering a vehicle. I seem to remember one chap
who had developed a car that runs on chicken droppings (maybe I
imagined that one!). One I didn't imagine was an article on Tomorrow's
World about diesel lorries that could run on solar power. The lorry was
converted to run on powdered algae. (finely powdered algae has the same
combustion properties as diesel fuel).
The algae was grown in a huge transparent coil (seperate to the lorry),
the heat from the lorry engine could be used to dry the algae and the
carbon dioxide emissions could be used to feed the algae. Nice
circular idea with water and solar power as the inputs.
Any other ones?
Barry_who_thinks_pedal_power_takes_a_lot_of_beating.
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