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neon_spork wrote:Personally I think electic is the way to go also. The latest electric motors are really efficient. We just need energy storage technology to catch up. I was pricing up Lipo batteries to convert an MX5 to electric = atleast 10K of batteries for a 200Km range.
xsspeed wrote:the whole canadian oil sands thing keeps being thrown around, obviously an issue refining this, but I believe technology for it is there? was wondering what the quality of this oil is, and what can be refined/distilled (forgotten term) from it, as in short chain - long chain HC's
sergei wrote:neon_spork wrote:Personally I think electic is the way to go also. The latest electric motors are really efficient. We just need energy storage technology to catch up. I was pricing up Lipo batteries to convert an MX5 to electric = atleast 10K of batteries for a 200Km range.
That's because 1) it is not mass produced
2) the NiMH (which was mass produced) was made unavailable due to oil company holding the patent for the vehicle use.
neon_spork wrote:How is reforming hydrocarbon A to hydrogen and then burning it better then burning hydrocarbon A in the first place?? I fail to see the benefit of a portable reformer.
Aother downside which you have not considered, and probably quite a big one for those who are climate change adverse is that steam reforming produces two products... Hydrogen and CO2.
for example
CH4 + H20 > CO + 3H2
CH4H10+4H2O > 4CO + 9H2
CO + H2O > CO2 + H2
neon_spork wrote:Right at this moment it's not so much that fossil fuels which are readily available are being held to ransom as that there is actually a world shortage of refining capacity. Specially for diesel and jetfuel.
neon_spork wrote:Lipo are used in laptops and phones now, hopefully we see the price come down.
fivebob wrote:neon_spork wrote:Lipo are used in laptops and phones now, hopefully we see the price come down.
Cost is not the only probelm, there are inherent safety issues with using LiPo cells, they tend to burst into flames if not charged correctly and currently have a much lower max charge and discharge rate the NiCd or NiMH cells. So you need more of them to get the same current draw and charging times are longer.
sergei wrote:in my opinion fuel bubble will burst sooner or later, as there is no shortage of oil at all, and like diamonds the price on fuel is highly inflated unlike diamonds we can't live without oil. And unfortunately huge profits are not used to invest into newer technologies but instead used to build pointless cities in middle of desert, artificial island out of sand which need full time maintenance and pointless skyscrapers again in middle of $&#$% desert, also it is used to fuel wars and slaughter of million of innocent people (as well as put into starving and retarding the progress in places like Africa).
molex wrote:The solution has been staring us in the face for 100 years, the electric car. More specifically I'm talking about the plug in electric, not solar/fuel cell/petrol electric hybrids. Development has been incredibly slow (and frequently non existant) because those making money would like to continue to make money. A car that removes big oil from every step of the supply process isn't a very good business opportunity, they will (and already have) go to extraordinary lengths to ensure their survival by killing off development of ideas contrary to their products. It's basic business at a big scale.
pc wrote:The electric car idea needs little/no work... but without a good method of transporting the power (a battery) then on a large scale, it doesn't work... it's best to think of hydrogen as a "battery" option not a "fuel".
Battery research has probably been stifiled to a degree by oil companies though.
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