Environmentally Friendly Race Cars, Military Vehicles 191
jackelfish writes "The non-profit organization IdéeVerte Compétition has created a 'space age' race car that runs on Liquefied Petroleum Gas (propane or butane) and is lubricated with sunflower oil. Sponsored by the European Space Agency, the car recently broke the 'LPG powered vehicle' speed record of 315 km/h. The car also utilizes space technologies such as a titanium fuel tank, heat shielding developed for the Ariane launch vehicles and an EGNOS satellite navigation system to determine the speed, acceleration and position of the car in real-time." And reader gkbarr writes "Is the DoD feeling the crunch of sky-high gasoline prices or are they being overrun by a bunch of Greens? Who cares, the latest Humvee looks to be a more capable and greener machine than its predecessors."
Environment Friendly Military?! (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Environment Friendly Military?! (Score:5, Funny)
More military->more wars->less humans-> better enviroment
Re:Environment Friendly Military?! (Score:2)
More military->more wars->less humans-> better enviroment
Sadly, the fact of the matter is that is not far from the truth.
People like to advocate decreasing CO2 production as a means for controlling global warming. However, if one puts the CO2 composition of the atmosphere on a timeline of human history they'd find only TWO instances where the exponential trend temporarily declines. These two points in human history? World War II and the Great Depression. Meaning, while lip-service like the
Re:Environment Friendly Military?! (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Environment Friendly Military?! (Score:2)
I prefer biological or chemical weapons.
All those carbon dioxide from the burning buildings isnt good for the athmosphere. not to mention clorine compounds, nitrous exocites, ect. Plus those human fat burning gives such black smoke...
Re:Environment Friendly Military?! (Score:5, Interesting)
Several million soccer moms in Ford Explorers averaging 11-14mpg might qualify.
Re:Environment Friendly Military?! (Score:2)
This is kind of off topic, but never the less I must point out that different countries, different states, cities and counties have different emission standards. For example in Washington there is no testing of vehicles older than 20 years or so. I forget the exact year but I know I sold my 1979 Toyota corolla last year, and I sold it after it was exempt from the testing requirement. Also only larger cities are required to test vehicles, rura
Re:Environment Friendly Military?! (Score:3, Interesting)
Not just being green, sound logistics strategy (Score:2)
Moreover, if it's twice as efficient it's putting out half the heat, making it harder for the enemy to see / fire heat-seeking missil
Re:Environment Friendly Military?! (Score:2)
A few weeks ago we had an Field Training Excercise at a camp in the middle of Nebraska. After we were done, we cleaned up not only our own garbage, but a bunch of spent shotgun shells that some hicks h
An observation (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:An observation (Score:5, Interesting)
This all applies very much to computer parts, which have a relatively huge backpack compared to their direct emissions (ie. by power consumption): Recent research by the German-based Wuppertal Institute as part of a large-scale investigation of Digital Europe showed that a 200g handheld computer requires the equivalent of 58 kilograms of raw materials in its manufacture, a massive overhead that we rarely think about. (from an undated article [developments.org.uk])
Re:An observation (Score:2)
and most of that material is water, perhaps about a bathtub full, hardly worthy of note.
A more interesting comparison is something like total energy required and ore required. Assume we have two raw materials, rock and electricity. How much rock and how much electricity does it take to generate this thing. You can throw in water as a third raw material if you wish, but usually it's fairly unimportant.
Seems almost "warcraft" like, but that would be the logical way to measure things.
"This computer took 2 t
Re:An observation (Score:5, Insightful)
It's always easier to get a warm, fuzzy feeling by focusing intently on one small parameter, doing something about that, and thinking you've solved the problem than it is to acknowledge the whole picture.
Ignorance, after all, is bliss.
When I pointed out to a friend that part of the cost of replacing older, less "enviromentally friendly" cars with new cars was the pollution inherent in dispossing of the old car prematurely and manufacturing the new one (not to mention the pollution inherent in earning the money to buy the new car, and the pollution inherent in. .
It's almost always more 'friendly' in the long run to use existing systems until they naturally expire than it is to replace them with new systems before that time. After all, isn't that why many of us spend so much time maintaining existing code base?
Is there any research being done in these areas as well. .
Oh sure. There are people, such as myself, who give a considerable amount of thought to the issue, and put a certain amount of work into it as well, but after doing it for a few decades you are inevitably faced with an issue:
Until the skies are all thick and brown, and the oil is all gone, nobody much is going to care. It always boils down to a dietary issue with shades of laziness on top("Yo, have we got enough money for a pizza?" Cool, have it delivered").
When that time comes there will be those of us standing around with solutions that might have been, although at that point largely irrelevant because, while they would have kept the air from becoming thick and brown, won't, in and of themselves, make the air any less thick.
There's an eternal cycle of creating your own problems, than patting yourself on the back for being clever enough to wangle your way out of them, and so far as I've ever been able to determine from observation, the purpose of man as machine seems to be to incessantly worry about the future while doing nothing practical about it, all the while regreting the past.
I don't understand it, but it seems to make people "happy."
KFG
Re:An observation (Score:2)
I doubt this statement is entirely true. What people need to do is look at update gross polluters. Cars that put out a disprortionate amount of pollution. An example, my 1969 GMC truck runs fine. It also only gets 9mpg, has no catalytic converter and is an environmentalist nightmare. I could drive it for many more miles. From an enviromen
Re:An observation (Score:2)
That said, it does bring the Japanese policy of taxing even slightly old cars into oblivion into a whole new light. How
<i>After all, isn't that why many of us spend so much time maintaining existing code base?</i>
Certainly not because nobody und
It's not about the oil being all gone... (Score:2)
Quite frankly, I'm surprised /. hasn't had any discussion on the subject of Peak Oil [peakoil.net]. Geologists following the models of King Hubbert have projected that oil production will peak within about two years, never to increase again. With India and China becoming big oil consumers, we don't have a choice anymore but to think about the energy cost of everything we do. When oil company executives [thebusinessonline.com] start telling you we're running out of oil, soon, and forever, why isn't
Re:An observation (Score:2)
It's almost always more 'friendly' in t
Re:An observation (Score:2, Interesting)
The issue is not the purchase of new vehicles, the issue is the timing of the purchase and what is done with the old vehicle. As old vehicles wear out and are disposed of at the end of their natural life cycle they will, of course, be replaced by a new vehicle, preferably a "better" one than the old. The tide of technology can still move forward at a sustainable rat
Re:An observation (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:An observation (Score:3, Insightful)
At the risk of oversimplifying, what is pollution? It's a layman's term for entropy. The conversion of a good from an ordered state into an unordered state. Every drop of
Re:An observation (Score:2)
What do you do with excess arsenic, cesium, etc. that may be byproducts of various recycling streams? You bury them as toxic waste.
Re:An observation (Score:2)
As such, instead of 18 mpg like the Tahoe gets (which, for better or worse, is better than what a Ford Pinto got in the 70's...), because they added about 2000 lbs of...???... to it, it now gets 11mpg.
The upcoming "H3", which will be a "hummerized" Chevy Colorado (whatever that platform is generically called
Re:An observation (Score:3, Insightful)
Making anything takes time, resources and energy, and something like a car, however green it is, is going to require a fair amount of all three in its manufacture. The start of a car's life, when it's built, isn't going to be where the best non-fuel-related savings are going to be made: even the most efficient build process wouldn't be
Re:An observation (Score:3, Insightful)
Things like lawn mowers, leaf blowers, and chainsaws are "simpler" devices, but pound-for-pound nearly 10x as bad as gas-guzzlers like the Hummer.
The real factor in the military's decision f
Re:An observation (Score:3, Insightful)
Why do they do these things? Because in many cases, there actually is a cost savings in more "green" industrial methods.
Re:An observation (Score:2)
Green Industry and Globalization (Score:3, Informative)
Over the past few years though, I have noticed a pretty
that RST is very toyota! (Score:3, Informative)
I have driven a prius about 4 times now, and have managed to average, at "99.9 miles per gallon" as it says on the display. albeit, ive only managed that to last about 10 minutes, when doing around 40mph, on relatively flat land, but still its pretty damn good fuel economy
Re:that RST is very toyota! (Score:3, Funny)
That's nothing. On my display in my 1966 Ford F-250 with a 5.7l engine and 50 gal fuel tanks I've managed to hit 100 mpg on my analog vacuum gauge. Imagine a 7,500 pound truck going down hill and you'll understand.
Re:that RST is very toyota! (Score:4, Funny)
Re:that RST is very toyota! (Score:2)
Well, considering your power brakes
Re:that RST is very toyota! (Score:2)
Assume the vehicle in question even had power brakes and steering (I have several that don't) the only thing that goes away is the power assist.
The brakes still work.
The steering still works.
In fact, the brakes don't really require that much extra effort. The steering can get pretty heavy, but that's because power steering racks tend to be closer ratio than manual. In fact, the hot autocross setup for some cars is to swap the power rack into the manual steering car.
Re:that RST is very toyota! (Score:2)
Re:that RST is very toyota! (Score:3, Informative)
Re:that RST is very toyota! (Score:2)
I think he means "impossible for a 5 year old child", and he has a point: You should never shut off the engine when your five year old is driving.
Re:that RST is very toyota! (Score:2)
Natural effort and the tendency of the wheels to camber into the curve while spinning are enough to steer a car that's moving at a decent speed.
This is better: no normal drive train (Score:4, Informative)
That means it doesn't need a sloppy differential
to let the wheels on the outside of a turn go
faster than the wheels on the inside of a turn.
The Prius, while nice, lacks this ability.
A Prius has a direct linkage from the engine to
the wheels; electric power is only an assist.
Re:This is better: no normal drive train (Score:3, Insightful)
not to mention the benefits of all wheel drive, independant traction control, and sheer torque from having four wheel based motors. The only real drawback is the maximum speed.. which is limited to the max rpms of the motor. However, nobody except racers needs to have a car that goes 150 mph.. in fact for all intents and purposes a car that can burn up a quarter mile, but maxes out at 100 is probably the perfect solution for general society.
I am just waiting for the day that i get my four wheel-motored pi
Don't panic (Score:5, Funny)
So relax, will ya... The DoD's not going to start respecting things. And with the Hummer you don't have to either.
I remember those days... (Score:3, Funny)
DoD Research (Score:5, Informative)
The militray is always interetsed in lower fuel consumption (as long as it doesn't degrade mission capabilities), because that means you have to haul less gas to the battlefield, lessening the logistical footprint. Fuel costs are a very small part of the equation - more of an added benefit than a driver, at least for combat and combat support vehicles.
In addition, hybrids can be more stealthy - less thermal signature, lower noise, etc. - which maes them better for many types of missions.
Size counts as wll - anything that helps load it (or more of them) into a C-130 or C-17 is a plus, especially since the US military is moving to lighter fast reaction forces that can be airlifted quickly to combat zones, rather than running massive convoys of ships that take days to get there.
spare electrical power too (Score:2)
The military already has at least two:
1. terahertz crowd suppression beam
2. solid-state (synthetic ruby) laser
Probably they have a secret rail gun too.
Re:spare electrical power too (Score:2)
You are half right (Score:2)
One of the other articles, either here or someplace else I read, about three other programs the first already undergoing field testing now is the recycling of water, not at the camp level but at the s
Re:You are half right (Score:2)
Yup = which is what I meant by reducing the logistical footprint; which is most of teh transport capability anyway, especially once the force is on the ground.
So now they just need to get rid of bull
Re:DoD Research (Score:2)
Gas isn't always readily available where you're going either. Multi-fuel systems are also being considered where you could use any one of a number of available hydrocarbon fuels to run the vehicle.
Re:DoD Research (Score:2)
Yeah I didn't think that the special 'high mobility' fuel tankers that have to follow gas-guzzling hummers around could be air lifted very easily...
Re:DoD Research (Score:2)
The navy is moving to do this with ships as well.
Instead of having two systems, you can reduce it to one big electrical generation system, with some of the power going
Fix government waste first (Score:4, Interesting)
I don't see any evidence of a shift at the DoD. Of course, increasing gasoline prices negatively impact anyone with vehicles - but if you want to save money due to gasoline prices, there are things you can do today.
For instance, government fleet vehicles could be hybrids. "But hybrids cost more, so the savings is negligable!". That's true... at TODAY'S fuel prices. But since fleet vehicles have a 3 year life (within the fleet), and since Wall Street says that gasoline prices will rise 40-50% within the next two years, a move to hybrids will cause the real cost of operating the fleet to fall dramatically.
Or, more fleet vehicles could go with LNG. The US has a lot of natural gas, and NG's price is a bit more stable than oil's price.
Right now, whenever you fill up your car with gas, remember that half the profits go directly to the likes of Iran, Saudi Arabia, and other terror-supporting states. In fact, they make enough money with these profits to do things like build nuclear weapons. In fact, Iran admits it is. Other countries haven't admitted it (Iraq, Saudi Arabia), but there is no reason to believe they aren't (or haven't) gone down that road covertly.
And for just that reason alone, LNG, with it's low and stable pricetag, is a compelling alternative to traditional gasoline.
Fleet vehicle operations cost the US taxpayer billions of dollars a year. Shouldn't these vehicles promote US policy and strive to reduce taxpayer costs?
We're not talking about taking away your car - we're talking about making some government beaurocrat's official vehicle much cheaper to run, and keeping US dollars here (and out of the middle east).
Re:Fix government waste first (Score:2)
I agree with poster about the historical prices of LNG, but I've also done a lot of coding for the financial sector. Their standard legal disclaimer is - Past Performance Is Not Indicative Of Future Results.
Re:Fix government waste first (Score:2)
I don't see any evidence of a shift at the DoD.
Not to mention the fact that the hybrid vehicle in the article isn't intended to replace the HMMWV in any capacity whatsoever. It even says at the end of the military.com article that it's replacing the M151A2 [fas.org], which is the old jeep. The dumbass at milita
Re:Fix government waste first (Score:2)
Unfortunately the natural gas of north america is fast diminishing. Within a decade we'll be importing natural gas from the same guys who sell us oil today. This is hardly a long term solution.
We could however try to use bio diesel as much as possible, and use nuclear generated H2 to replace Natural Gas generated H2, and that would help on both fronts. Using heat pump style heating instead of natural gas would also be helpful, but only if we don't have power plants burning natural gas to produce electricit
Interesting goals for the Humvee (Score:3, Informative)
It was also done with a different engine, and didn't include so many differences from the regular chassis. The one described in this article is by far a more advanced concept, and it looks like it's almost production ready.
It's too bad the civilian Hummer is just a Suburban now. I'd like to see one of these bad boys on the dealer's lot! (I'd imagine the local Ham radio survivalist types could build a whole comm station into one.)
Re:Interesting goals for the Humvee (Score:2)
Also of note is the fact that the Shadow IFV isn't even intended to replace the Hummer in any capacity. The moron author even says so himself:
The M151A2 isn't the Hummer, it's the old Jeep [fas.org]!
The H2 is just a cheaper knockoff of the H1,but without a turbodiesel engine option, so you can't even *try* to keep fuel co
Re:Interesting goals for the Humvee (Score:2)
Oh, it's certainly BUILT to go offroad, I agree. I was just thinking of the cosmetic appearance and luxury interior
Speed record (Score:5, Interesting)
I live in Poland (where car drives you) and people often modify their cars to use LPG instead of petrol (actually the car can run on both fuels).
The car loses some of its horsepower, but I've been driving at almost 200km/h on LPG myself, so I see no reason to employ space technology to go 50% faster.
Re:Speed record (Score:4, Interesting)
I've driven that fast myself (Score:2)
All for a cost significantly less than a normal midsize car, and three times the adrenaline.
I drove a Suzuki Hayabusa [suzukihayabusa.org]. Fantastic machine. Insurance costs forced me to sell it, though. Attracted all kinds of reckless drivers, young guys who needed to prove something.
(OTOH, everything is relative. Yes, going 300+ km/h with your eyes about 3 feet from the ground does cramp your stomach a bit. There's a threshol
this one might be different.. (Score:4, Interesting)
For these cars to be be commercially viable for production, the speed has to be near 200 kmph.Thats more than enough for most people.I think speed is one of the reasons why these cars don't sell.
why they are wimpy (Score:2)
and often even wants, whimpy vehicles. You don't
want your fleet vehicles to be used for racing.
If you're a hard-core environmentalist, you're
expected to be dirt-poor from spending all your
money (not much -- you were an art major) on the
organically grown bean sprouts you need to survive.
Diesel-electric can go plenty fast though, and the
acceleration can be awesome. This just requires
a change of target market. Engineering has no
trouble with this.
Re:this one might be different.. (Score:3, Informative)
I think hydrogen counts as a natural fuel, and BMW have non-commercial versions going 300 km/h [h2cars.biz]. The fact is that when you say electric vehicles crawl slower than snails you only mean top-end speed. An electric vehicle will leave its petrol equivalent dead at the lights. I think the massive increase in acceleration will be a big seller.
Phillip.
Re:this one might be different.. (Score:2, Informative)
I'm surprised this hasn't caught on in the US, especially with the recent increase in oil pri
North-eastern BC... (Score:2)
Re:this one might be different.. (Score:2)
And of course its less pollution.
Electrical Loads (Score:3, Informative)
New Humvee looks like APC from Aliens (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:New Humvee looks like APC from Aliens (Score:2)
Otherwise though I can't see any similarity at all.
It's mostly the wheel hubs (Score:3, Interesting)
Breaking (Score:2)
Apparently military.com's editors are all on 'brake'.
Re:Breaking (Score:2)
Naming Issues (Score:2)
"The Super Sea Stallion" helicopter for example, whoever named that has issues.
Re:Naming Issues (Score:3, Funny)
Also I wonder where they might go from here:
Super Wicked Space Robostallion
Super Fire Breathing Sea Kraken Of Law
Mad Water Monster What Can Fly
Ultimate Storm Stallion
Re: Humvee (Score:2)
The desert version is tanner than its predecessors.
coupe or hatch? (Score:4, Funny)
How about biodiesel power? (Score:2)
Essentially, use the engine from the Mercedes-Benz E320 CDI and put the smallest chassis and body around that engine. Modify it to ensure complete compatibility with biodiesel fuel and the result is a race car that could probably go way over 300 km/h (186 mph) and still get far superior fuel efficiency to its gasoline-fuelled competition.
Where do they get journos nowadays? (Score:2)
This is so technologically illiterate I almost despair, though I think it means
Specifications (Score:2)
Someone should probably let you in on a little secret: Motors and generators are generally the same thing, the name depends on how they are used. I'm sure you already know this but all of the motors would better be termed "motor-generator" units, because I'm sure they're doing regenerative braking, and I wouldn't be surprised to hear that the main generator is also used as a starter motor for the diesel, which would make sense as it would cut down on the number of components. If I had piles of money I'd li
Re:Specifications (Score:2)
Otherwise, it'd be a fun exercise.
Mechanical motivation (Score:2)
This vehicle isn't going to completely replace the Humvee, but it will perform certain tasks (like fast recon) much better. The 138hp engine indicates it's not being built as a "do everythin
Re:Mechanical motivation (Score:2)
The 138Hp engine powers the generator almost all the time, probably mostly at peak efficiency. The 4 50KW (67HP) electric motors drive the wheels when needed, with the amount of power needed (up to 268HP when accelerating, a handfull of HP when cruising, down to -268HP when braking). Given that it's got an all-aluminum frame and body, it could be a do (almost) anything vehicle.
You probably don't need a long range, silent, fast, low radar & thermal signature vehicle for towing artillery anyways as arti
RTFA, submitter! (Score:2, Flamebait)
gkbarr [mailto] either didn't read the article they posted, or their military fetish blocked the truth from penetrating the brain layer that controls the posting hand. If the military even uses this tech, rather than just spend billions of our dollars on corporate welfare and PR about "khaki green", they'll use it twice as
Re:RTFA, submitter! (Score:2)
Moderation 0
50% Flamebait
50% Insightful
In the same spirit, the "Flamebait" spewing mod either didn't RTFA, or their own military fetish gets in the way of reading military criticism. Armies kill people and destroy places: that's bad for the environment. We'd better get used to it.
Glaring Errors (Score:4, Informative)
The Hummer H2 is not the civilian equivalent of the HMMWV, the H1 is. The H2 is a totally unrelated vehicle based on the Chevy Tahoe SUV. The military is obviously interested in reducing fuel consumption, as driving tankers of diesel around is a logistical nightmare, but really that's about the end of it. And at the end there's this glaring error:
OK, so the Shadow isn't replacing the "gas guzzling" Hummer, it's replacing the M151A2! The M151 is the good old fashioned jeep, with a tiny 4 cylinder gasoline engine. Hardly a gas guzzler. The author clearly wanted to put a "green" spin on the story, but didn't bother to research a number of his assumptions, the stupidest of which was assuming the M151A2 was the Hummer!
Re:Glaring Errors (Score:2)
Re:Glaring Errors (Score:2)
I spent five years in the Marine Corps, and a year in the Army National Guard, and the only jeeps I saw were old rusting hulks, often cut up for scrap metal, shoved off in a corner of the motor pool parking lot.
So I'd write it off as shoddy research as well, but not for the reason the grandparent did. You can't replace the jeep bec
Re:Glaring Errors (Score:2)
Re:Glaring Errors (Score:2)
No, the Hummer has been in service for 20-odd years and has always been a big, bulky vehicle. Nobody in the Marine Corps would ever seriously suggest replacing small, light jeeps with the Hummer for the Fast Attack Vehicle role because it cannot be transported inside a CH-53 or CH-46 helicopter or the V-22 Osprey tiltrotor, which is a requirement for the FAV. They've been soliciting designs to replace the M151 jeep f
Re:Glaring Errors (Score:2)
The HUMMWV has been used as a FAV by the Army and Marines for more than 20 years now, and it's configuration reflects this. It's also being used as an armored scout car these days. It may offend the sensibilities of those who insists there's a proper tool fo
HMMV replacement (Score:2)
It was replaced because a more fuel-efficient vehicle makes supply chain logistics significantly easier.
Hybrid Hummer (Score:2)
The fuel of the future (Score:2)
Taxis in Australia have been using LPG for over 10 years - that's pretty much 100% of taxis in every major city. I also have friends who run LPG. You can only tune the engine for one fuel, so you lose power with either petrol or LPG. Also, every car starts on petrol - even if running on LPG, so you still ca
Is there anything scifi hasn't predicted? (Score:2)
Last night I saw something on the troops of the future on tv and the helmet with integrated camera and flip down screen could have been a prop out of that movie.
Now to find a motion tracker.
Re:Is there anything scifi hasn't predicted? (Score:2)
<http://www.hkpro.com/g11.htm>HK G11 baby</a>
Environmently vehicle (Score:2)
Overrun by Greens (Score:2)
Well, you know the Army does pride itself on being the lean, green fighting machine. D'oh! Please, don't throw rotten eggs. I just cleaned this suit.
Re:Ok, fine. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:I don't get it! (Score:3, Insightful)
Hydrogen isn't exactly a perfect fuel either. Hydrogen has to be generated, usually by splitting water, which requires electricity. That electricity is often generated by burning fossil fuels like oil or coal. (Yes, it can also be generated by other greener means, but most power production in the U.S. still involves fossil fuels. BTW, wind power is probably the best option since it actually takes energy out of the atmosphere directly.) Storage of Hydrogen safely is also problematic.
Right now, the bes
Re:I don't get it! (Score:2)
dude, we don't get significant electricity from oil. The next time someone talks about "save elecricity and we won't have to buy so much oil..." i'm going to puke. We make elecricity from three primary sources, in order of magnitude (always wanted to say that).
1) Coal.
2) Nuclear.
3) Natural Gas.
These three combined are essentially all our electricity (90+%).
As for generating hydrogen, cars are about the least useful thing Hydrogen can do. It turns out LOTS of industrial processes (like producing gasoline
Re:I can hardly wait... (Score:2)
Nope, but you'll be surrounded by Suburbans-in-drag that *look* just like them.