Multiple Manufacturers Push Hydrogen Fuel Cell Cars, But Can They Catch Tesla? 293
MojoKid writes After years of working on prototype vehicles, multiple car companies have announced a major push for hydrogen fuel cell automobiles. At the LA Auto Show last week, Toyota showed off its Mirai, a four-door passenger sedan with a $57,500 base sticker price and a hydrogen-only fuel system. Honda recently delayed its hydrogen-powered FCX Clarity Fuel Cell Electric Vehicle until 2016, while Hyundai is planning to build 1000 fuel-cell powered Tucson's by the end of the year. Currently, most proposed hydrogen fuel cell vehicles are actually combined hydrogen-electric designs. Hydrogen gas, under enormous pressure, is used to drive a generator, which then charges a lithium-ion battery. Toyota plans to sell up to 3,000 Mirai a year by 2017, which would put it well below Tesla's own sales projections for its Model S — but at a lower overall price point. The pressurized fuel tanks in the Mirai can hold a total of 122 liters of hydrogen for an estimated range of 300 miles. A standard gasoline-powered car with a 122L capacity at 30mpg would be capable of traveling 960 miles. Proponents of hydrogen point to the vastly improved fueling time (roughly equal that of gasoline) as opposed to the 20-60 minutes required to recharge a vehicle like Tesla's Model S.
That toyota is HIDEOUS!!! (Score:2)
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Maybe.....but maybe not (Score:2)
It's not inconceivable that fuel cell cars will be a success but the current state of tech is much better suited to stationary storage or heavy vehicles.
From the few reviews I've found, they seem to a bit on the sluggish side unless paired with a battery, which makes them more expensive.
As for catching Tesla, they'll really have to throw money and resources into it - Tesla is NOT standing still and they've already built out their fast charging infrastructure.
Hydrogen transport and storage is nowhere near as
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Hydrogen is a terrible energy storage medium compared to modern battery technology. The only possible advantages it has are (a) you can generate it from fossil fuels, and (b) it lends itself far more in today's rooftop-solar-filled world to central control and taxation.
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Hydrogen is a terrible energy storage medium compared to modern battery technology.
Well maybe for combustion, but wait til we put fusion plants in every car...
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Ofc fuel cells can, hence they are placed into cars now.
Your information/assumption is outdated since 20 years or more.
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And in the future, we can shoot them and they'll make awesome explosions when we need to kill some pesky super mutants.
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That is right, erm, or not? ...
The best battery based cars have a range of 500 miles, most far less.
A hydrogen fuel cell car has a range of 1500
A battery based car needs hours to reload.
A hydrogen fuel cell car around 5 mins.
Hydrogen might have draw backs, but in comparison with 'battery' tech it rocks!
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Just a few facts:
Toyota fuel cell car has a range of 300 miles... same as the electric Tesla.
Tesla can recharge in 20 minutes at a SuperCharger, not "hours".
Electric outlets are everywhere... hydrogen refuel stations are... where? (I think there might be one in California).
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Hydrogen makes some sense for long haul trucks and Greyhound and alike. The high capital investment of filling stations and the rest of the infrastructure etc can be more easily absorbed by fleets. It makes almost no sense for passenger cars.
However, Kenworths, Macks and Volvos of the world are in no rush to do that capital investment from their side, lacking any serious incentives.
next gen batteries (Score:2)
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It's not achievable in the near future, because the speed at which the batteries can absorb energy isn't the sole limiting factor. Charging an 85 kWh battery pack in 5 minutes requires a charging cable/port that is dumping slightly more than a megawatt into the car, which isn't practical. The limitations are things like the cable, the connector, the power grid, etc.
A far more likely scenario is that charging will get a little bit faster, and battery swaps will be used when more speed is required.
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> That should be enough to charge a decent battery in a few minutes.
Gasoline density is 32.4 MJ/L.
Assume a 60L tank (~16 gallons).
Assume you can fill up your vehicle in 10 minutes.
60 L/10 min * 34.4 MJ/L = 3.4 MW
That's nearly 7 times faster than your 500 kW charger. Assume a 475 mile (30 mpg * 60 L) / 765 km (60 L / (7.84 L / 100 km)) range from that gasoline fill up.
That means your "quick and speedy" 10 minute 500 kW fill up can provide all of 70 miles of range.
It's a matter of physics.
Re:next gen batteries (Score:4, Interesting)
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Battery swapping "technology" ?
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And you'd have to rent the battery, because no-one wants to take their brand new car with a brand new battery worth thousands of dollars to have it swapped for a ten-year-old battery that's on its last legs. Which means you're now tied to one specific battery swapping chain, which may or may not exist along your route.
Think about it for more than two seconds, and the whole 'battery swap' thing is just insane.
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It already exists. tesla has demonstrated a battery swapper on their model S swapping the battery in a lot less time than a gas refill.
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If you're going to compare that way, you need to factor the relative efficiencies of the two fuels -
electricity can be converted into kilometers about 3.5 times as effectively as petrol can.
Rule of thumb; Electric cars get 5 km to the kWh
500 kW watts for 10 minutes = 83 kWh = 400 km = 250 miles
But really, who cares which is faster, which do you think about first when deciding what car to buy;
Fuel economy, price, style, carrying capacity, cost of maintenance, or speed of fill up?
Charging doesn't have to be
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You're both wrong.
It takes me 5 minutes to fill up my Mazda 3S, which gets about 300 miles from the tank (at 30mpg, I can hit 320; often I fill up at 290-295, almost on E but not hitting the idiot light yet). I have noticed modern gas stations run the pumps slower--about 1/4-1/2 speed--compared to the previous generation, which annoys me.
It takes 20 minutes for a Tesla Supecharger to put a 50% (150 mile) charge on the battery, or 40 minutes to put 300 miles on. That's 8 times the time. At home, a 24
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I spend 5 seconds plugging in my car when I get home and 5 seconds unplugging in the morning. I spend far less time than I spent filling my gas car up where I'd have to go out of my way to a gas station, wait in line and fill up. Yes, there's a bit of a wait on long trips, but for most of my driving I spend far less time. When battery swapping is available it will take me roughly 90 seconds without me ever having to step out of my car (and for those who don't know, battery swapping includes getting your ori
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I don't think about speed of fillup at all, because the time required is pretty much inconsequential for any "normal" car.
On the other hand, if the choice i were making included a car that could fill up in five minutes and a car that took a minimum of half an hour, then yes it would make a difference. And not in favour
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Also, regenerative breaking might come into play. 30 MPG is an arbitrary assumption to compare the electric vehicle mileage per unit energy to.
That's a convoluted way to get the wrong answer. (Score:2)
Electric cars get ~100 mpge (miles per gallon equivalent).
Now try your silly calculation again.
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Bad idea (Score:2)
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A fuel cell + hydrogen tank have a much higher energy density (even when measured in fuel cell output) as any battery in the next couple of years will have. Therefore, there could be a market. Especially, as with renewable energy sources the production of hydrogen could be triggered just then when there is an overproduction of electricity and store it.
But, true cars (electric or otherwise) are not the best solution for all our transportation problems. Therefore, we must move away from them where they are a
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No refueling infrastructure (Score:2)
A fuel cell + hydrogen tank have a much higher energy density (even when measured in fuel cell output) as any battery in the next couple of years will have.
Which is irrelevant because hydrogen powered vehicles lack even rudimentary refueling infrastructure and thus will not be a meaningful part of the discussion for at least another 10-20 years a minimum.
Especially, as with renewable energy sources the production of hydrogen could be triggered just then when there is an overproduction of electricity and store it.
You have to have something to do with the hydrogen. We have no infrastructure that could absorb such production even if it made economic sense to store energy that way. It's a solvable problem if the economics make sense but doing so would take considerable time. Not a bad idea in principle but I don't know
Higher energy density ? (Score:2)
Actually in practice it seems to be the contrary. A Testa and the Hydrogen Toyota get aound 250 miles on a full charge/tank. But if you compare the drivetrain of a tesla and the Toyota you'll see the Tesla is much more compact. The front space 'frunk' is empty in the Tesla and full in the Toyota. In addition the Toyota need sapce under all seats and part of the truck is used too. The entire drivetrain and energy storage of a Tesla is in the floor and does not get in the way.
It's The Parts Count (Score:2)
I think the major manufacturers are afraid of the reduced parts count that pure electric cars have and the implied loss of profit margin because of it. So they keep trying to sell hybrid systems that bundle an internal combustion engine with an electric motor in order to keep the parts count high.
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You are right of course, but that's not really a central part of this particular story. Hydrogen fuel cells are not internal combustion engines.
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Every single car executive knows that is what happens and there is no way they are going to make the same mistake that American car companies made in the 70's and 80's
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The part count is not a cost advantage (Score:3)
We're not talking about evolutionary change but revolutionary. Drop in parts number is so drastic that it allows for more competitors to sprung up (hence Tesla)
I'm a cost accountant and I do this sort of stuff for a living. You have the cost accounting completely wrong. The different in part numbers provides Tesla no cost advantage at this time because the parts they have to buy are significantly more expensive. Electric vehicles have such low sales volumes currently that any cost advantage they might have from reduced part counts is hugely swamped by the high R&D costs and fixed costs of production. They simply don't have enough volume to reach minimum ef
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You're misrepresenting the history of the Japanese vs. U.S. auto manufacturers. There were many reasons why the U.S. failed, and to reduce it to "someone coming along with a way to cut their costs a small percent..." is just revisionist history. The Japanese didn't have nearly as much overhead as U.S. manufacturers. They didn't have to fight with the UAW year after year. They didn't have a huge pension program that had to be covered by the cost of every vehicle sold. And, while they sold crap vehicles
It has nothing to do with the part counts (Score:5, Insightful)
I think the major manufacturers are afraid of the reduced parts count that pure electric cars have and the implied loss of profit margin because of it.
I'm in the auto industry and I'm a cost accountant. The part count on cars generally has only a modest (though significant) effect on profit margin and increasing part counts usually implies negative effects on profit margin. If anything they would welcome the reduced part counts because it would likely reduce costs, particularly warranty, production and maybe engineering. It's a competitive market so unnecessarily inflating part counts translates into reduced profit margin, not increased like you are implying.
So they keep trying to sell hybrid systems that bundle an internal combustion engine with an electric motor in order to keep the parts count high.
They sell hybrids because that is the state of the technology. We don't have the battery technology or charging infrastructure to go fully electric yet outside of some niche markts. We may in due time but not today. Hybrids are expensive because the technology is new, complex and doesn't enjoy full economies of scale yet.
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niche?, you can go coast to coast in a tesla using superchargers this year
http://ecomento.com/2014/01/14... [ecomento.com]
most of the US will be covered by 2015, get some research fingers going on google
Still niche because those superchargers provide far less refuelling density than the existing gas stations. Given the increased time to refuel, even with a supercharger, the density has to be greater than the existing gas stations serving that route.
The build out of superchargers is impressive but it is catering to a relatively small number of vehicles.
132 stations is not "blanketing the US" (Score:3)
niche?, you can go coast to coast in a tesla using superchargers this year
Yes niche. There is precisely 1 supercharger station in my state and it is on the other side of the state from where I live. Having a route by which you can go coast to coast means very little by itself unless that happens to be the specific route you need to follow. Believe it or not, not everyone lives in NYC or LA or even particularly close to the interstates that directly connect them. Good luck getting across North Dakota [teslamotors.com] in your Tesla.
most of the US will be covered by 2015, get some research fingers going on google
That's not even remotely true. They have 132 stations in the U
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When they get the number of stations into the tens of thousands then I'll concede the point.
I don't think the number needs to be anywhere near that high. Not remotely.
Don't make the mistake of thinking of supercharger stations as analogous to your average neighborhood gas station. They're nothing like that. Supercharger stations are only needed for long-distance travel. They're analogous to the big travel centers you find along the interstates and other highways which carry significant amounts of long-distance traffic, and the numbers required are similar to those of travel centers. If there's o
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It's not hard to envisage every gas station having chargers some day (or diners / supermarkets / convenience stores who want to attract business while vehicles charge). That day is still some way off.
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I think the major manufacturers are afraid of the reduced parts count that pure electric cars have and the implied loss of profit margin because of it.
And there you have the base reason why so many states are trying to ban Tesla sales. Not having to get screwed over by dealerships and parts suppliers, and manufacturers are giving these people fits.
So they keep trying to sell hybrid systems that bundle an internal combustion engine with an electric motor in order to keep the parts count high.
I think that is more of a happy side effect for them. Right now, hybrids avoid the anxiety many feel of "What if I suddenly feel like driving from Florida to Alaska?"
It really doesn't matter though, because in the end, unless there is an outright ban on EV's they are gonna win this one. Just a matter of time.
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"What if I suddenly feel like driving from Florida to Alaska?"
How about Arizona to Fairbanks. [autoblog.com] Seventeen days for the trip is quite a long time, though. I've driven between LA and Fairbanks twice, and can do it in 7 days without pushing too hard.
I'm confused (Score:2)
Is it a car powered by gas under pressure, or is it hydrogen fuel-cell, where the gas is catalysed with Oxygen to produce electricity? How is it so horribly inefficient, given how we already know how horribly inefficient combustion engines are? Is it simply a case that, no matter how compressed you get the gas, you have not compressed it to liquid levels?
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At least the editors, who are surely knowledgeable enough about technology to have a basic grasp on what a hydrogen-oxygen fuel cell is, likely from growing up reading about the Space Shuttle and thinking decades ahead about how cool it will be to power everything with such an amazing device, were able to catch this absurd inaccuracy and correct it before publishing this idiotic submission.
Wait...you mean to tell me that it was only all of the readers of Slashdot who caught that, not the editors? How did th
PR (Score:2)
Fuel cells are 100% PR. Like solar cells, they are decades away from being economical.
I'd greatly prefer to see something practical and can be made today. A natural gas powered Honda Fit with an inexpensive home refueler would be ideal.
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Fuel cells are 100% PR. Like solar cells, they are decades away from being economical.
Then again, so are all the alternatives.
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" Like solar cells, they are decades away from being economical."
Yea... no. They've been economical for several years. Have you been paying attention to China pumping out tons of them at like $0.4/W? $100 for a 250w panel. A few years ago, that was more like $200. And the prices are only dropping faster and further with many more countries starting to realize Solar is indeed a viable energy source. Combine with extremely high-efficiency tech, like LED lighting, and the realization of not needing that much S
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We don't need another distribution network. (Score:2)
We have propane, natural gas, automotive fuel and electricity widely available. The cost of building a 5th energy source is prevent Hydrogen from going anywhere. ...
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Wake me when they solve the infrastructure problem (Score:2)
Honda recently delayed its hydrogen-powered FCX Clarity Fuel Cell Electric Vehicle until 2016, while Hyundai is planning to build 1000 fuel-cell powered Tucson's by the end of the year
Wow! A whole 1000 cars. Drop meet ocean. [/sarcasm] Those sorts of production volumes make even electric cars look like hot sellers.
Proponents of hydrogen point to the vastly improved fueling time (roughly equal that of gasoline) as opposed to the 20-60 minutes required to recharge a vehicle like Tesla's Model S.
With the downside that there is no refueling infrastructure in place. At all. Kinda hard to refuel your car in 5 minutes if there is nowhere to refuel it. And without a substantial number of hydrogen powered cars on the road there is no economic incentive to build hydrogen refueling stations. If you ever needed an example of a strawman argument, here you have it. Elect
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Infrastructure has to be built one sale at a time. Tesla is demonstrating one way to do it with their supercharger network, with trickle chargers in the home, and supercharging stations scattered around the country, trying to bridge gaps in coverage.
A hydrogen infrastructure will look different, because pressurized hydrogen isn't as ubiquitous as electricity. They might have better luck with a regional approach, selling commuter cars in one city, and building up an infrastructure there just to prove it ca
Better competition (Score:2)
The more options we have, the better the competition for one to win out, and the faster we get off of oil. To me it doesn't matter if they get better performance than Tesla right now or even the near future.
Electric cars are already here and they're cheap (Score:2)
Right now, you can get a electric Lamborghini Aventador [radioshack.com] for only $29.99 so don't tell me electric cars are too expensive.
Stupid idea (Score:2)
Apart from all of the problems storing, transporting, and obtaining hydrogen (both in terms of the often fossil-based source and the difficulty of finding some to put in your car), it's about as expensive as gasoline per mile. And the cars are no cheaper either.
Clean energy? Ahem... (Score:2)
The first non-spam comment on the article: "Clean energy!" Right... That rather depends on where the hydrogen comes from. If it's made by cracking water with energy from coal power plants, well...
Hydrogen has potential, but the manufacturers have some big problems to solve. Accident safety with those high-pressure (700 atmosphere) tanks. Leakage - hydrogen is very difficult to contain. A fueling infrastructure - at least with electric vehicles, any plug will do in a pinch. Transport - if you have fueling st
dragrace (Score:2)
in a dragrace between fuelcell cars and a tesla model s, the tesla car driver will only see the fuelcell cars in front of him/her. (or is it the other way around? can't seem to remember).
I don't think hydrogen makes sense (Score:3)
At least, compressed hydrogen gas is really questionable.
Besides the well-known problems associated with containing hydrogen, I'm skeptical that it makes sense to build out a whole new distribution system. We have an extensive network in place for distributing gasoline and smaller ones for distributing compressed natural gas (CNG) and liquid propane (LP), but hydrogen gas is very different from any of those three. We also have a network in place for distributing electricity. Granted that it will have to be beefed up in many ways to support a society of all electric vehicles, that still seems like a much easier task. Particularly since with the increasing deployment of home PV generation, the electric grid might not need to be beefed up as much as we think.
It all really comes down to the cost of batteries. The only saving grace of compressed hydrogen vs batteries is that big batteries are expensive. And somewhat heavy, but probably not much heavier than the tanks needed to contain hydrogen. So is it cheaper to build lots of batteries and improve the electric grid where needed, or to build out an entirely new distribution infrastructure?
My money is on electric vehicles. Battery prices are falling just due to small incremental improvements plus scaling, and there are a number of technologies on the horizon that promise to significantly increase the kWh/$ ratio. Yes, yes, many of them have been "on the horizon" for a while, but there are so many promising technologies that it seems very probable that at least one will work out. Note that I'm not talking about recharge times, because Tesla has already solved that problem... given ~300 miles range and a one-hour recharge time, you're good even for cross-country trips.
Another option that might make a lot of sense is fuel cells that run on gasoline or CNG. Those would have many of the benefits of an EV (quiet, powerful electric drive; very simple, low-maintenance drive train), but could use existing fueling infrastructure. They still emit some CO2, but less than ICEs.
(Disclaimer: I own an electric vehicle.)
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Containing hydrogen is easy. You just build a hollow, spherical core of an aluminum superalloy, 12mm thick, surrounded by 654 concentric 1-atom-thick graphene shells. This provides the highest tensile strength of any material manufactured to date, and acts as a perfect rotational bearing.
Around this, you place a gyroscope constructed of a sphere of ultrapolished silicone, 2cm thick, plated on its interior with 7mm of niobium, and assembled from two fused hemispheres. The gyro itself is suspended in su
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The smart money is indeed on electric vehicles. The smarter money is on not putting all our eggs in one basket.
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If you run down the list of known chemical and electrical means to store energy, you find
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If you value your time over every thing else, including safety, you mean.
So yeah, if you're the kind who'll do a 3 day drive non-stop, you'd probably go ICE (then again, if you really valued your time, you might consider flying - either commercially or genera
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But those people generally are rare and most normal people do want to stop to stretch legs and eat outside of the car, which means easily a 30-40 minute stop at a rest stop which is an ideal time to charge up.
Guess I don't know any 'normal' people, then. They regularly drive much further than a Tesla can without recharging, and might stop for five minutes at several different places, but don't stop for half an hour anywhere.
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Makes no sense (Score:2)
Sure, instead of fully electric, where cars can charge off of the current grid (with the right outlet installed), let's invest is a fully proprietary fuel source.
Gas volume vs Liquid volume? (Score:2)
Is that a 122 L tank or is it the volume of Hydrogen at STP?
Why not compare the distance you could travel with 122 L of liquid Hydrogen against 122 L gasoline vapors? (of course, that wouldn't fit with the narrative they are trying to put forward)
Hydrogen is a scam (Score:2)
It is mostly produced from hydrocarbon fractionation, mostly natural gas fractionation. It can also be produced from coal. It there does nothing to reduce dependence on fossil fuels and the process release large amounts of CO2. So, in my opinion, it is a useless road to go down and a scam.
Correct me if I'm wrong, but... (Score:2)
Isn't there something completely wrong about this sentence? Aside from the bad grammar, I mean...
"Hydrogen gas, under enormous pressure, is used to drive a generator, which then charged a lithium-ion battery."
Or are they using the word "generator" where they actually mean "fuel cell"? And should we be surprised that "most proposed hydrogen fuel cell vehicles are actually combined hydrogen-electric designs"? I'm not seeing many internal combustion hydrogen designs hitting the market.
Surely there was a better
Hydrogen will never work (Score:2)
Unfortunately, Hydrogen won't take off (at least in the US). The reason is fairly simple, gas stations don't want it to. The current gasoline infrastructure won't work as is for Hydrogen, and the gas companies and providers don;t want to retrofit to be able to handle it. Tesla has the advantage of being able to create it's own infrastructure outside of gas stations, since all they need is a power line. But with having to have holding tanks and dispensers, Hydrogen is going to be locked into using existing g
Here is the real answer (Score:2)
Here are more than 8700 electric stations in America which does not include RVs
That is why Tesla is going to win out on this.
Hell, Tesla offers 130 stations in the US, that allows tesla owners to charge for free. [slashdot.org]
And within several years, you can swap out the battery pack in less time and cheaper than H2.
Replace instead of recharging batteries (Score:2)
One technology for batteries that could be developed is for a charging station to replace your electric car batteries with freshly charged ones. You could potentially be in and out faster than refueling by gas. That would be one solution to overcome the lengthy recharging.
I imagine there are still a lot of hurdles to jump over to get such a system working:
- How to design batteries so they can be replaced easily and quickly. Perhaps each car might have several sets of batteries, some of which can be easily r
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That would be typical of a US company to have no real understanding of history. Hindenburg is the key enabler for Hitler.
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Don't worry, they've heard your complaints and have decided to rename it the "Titanic," because of its generously spacious interior.
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GM actually did a cool ground-up design that was called Autonomy (looks like they changed the name to Hy-Wire) since I followed it. It used a skate-board chassis very similar to what Tesla uses now.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/G... [wikipedia.org]
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Per your own statistic on the first in the first 3 months of the year Tesla sold 5000 cars. That's 1666 a month. They sold 2500 in September. They already have over 50,000 in the market place worldwide.
BMW is selling 1000/month of their electric(y) car.
Based on the numbers how long will it take for BMW to catch Tesla?
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That's why I don't get why they're pushing Hydrogen.
With CNG I can fill up at home. It'd be like installing a high current plug except I'd pipe NG to a compressor and let it fill up my car.
Natural Gas is already flowing through hundreds (thousands?) of pipelines across the US. There are already filling stations. Honda has offered a CNG fleet vehicle for ages.
Get the price of a home compressor down to a Level 2 charger ($1000) and let me by a CNG car.
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It is an edge bet against a future where petrofuels are too expensive. With declining oil prices electric cars and hydrogen cars are going to start becoming less attractive just like what happened in the 90s last time this was attempted. Tesla might still sell with their angle on performance. These guys will probably not sell well at all. Plus cost effective ways to produce hydrogen without using petrofuels or natural gas have never actually materialized. One way is high temperature nuclear power plants usi
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Actually much of commercial hydrogen comes from some form of natural gas in a process called hydrocarbon fractonation.. Hydrogen is a scam run by the fossil fuels industry. It can in fact be produced by running live steam over coal. Wiki it up if you do not believe me.
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Gas would have to go below $0.40 cents a gallon to be competitive with electricity... not going to happen.
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Keep in mind, being able to fuel up at home in an electric car means you'll save significant time not driving out of your way to get to fueling stations.
I've driven a Nissan Leaf for about a year and a half now. Never having to stop at a gas station is amazing.
I don't understand how in the world these big companies are betting huge on Hydrogen. It just makes no sense.
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I can't say for sure, but hot water heaters already store explosive compounds (steam) at sometimes high pressures. Compressing natural gas doesn't make it more dangerous then natural gas in general and a good storage container should minimize the risk of explosion. So it shouldn't really raise any extra risks, however as a 'new' technology being introduced into homes I doubt it would be trusted.
Just look at the overreaction to a couple of Tesla's that caught on fire (in very controlled manners) and how poli
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In what universe do hot water heaters store steam? And in what universe is steam "explosive"?
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A steampunk universe, most likely.
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Risk is non-zero (Score:2)
Are there any reasons (safety or otherwise) why it wouldn't be easy to install a natural gas compressor in my house?
Any time you have a compressed flammable substance near your house there is some risk involved. I don't think it is substantially more than the risk from a propane tank but it's non-zero. Nothing to get paranoid about but there are safety considerations.
Would having a high pressure tank of natural gas sitting in or near my house sit well with my insurance company?
It could affect the underwriting premiums potentially.
Filling up a natural gas car currently no picnic (Score:2)
Natural Gas is already flowing through hundreds (thousands?) of pipelines across the US. There are already filling stations.
Yes there is infrastructure accessible (like electric) but there aren't very many fueling stations for CNG vehicles readily available to most people. I honestly could not begin to tell you where there is a CNG refueling station near where I live though I know there are a handful. I can however tell you where there are some electric and plenty of gasoline/diesel refueling stations. CNG is an easier problem to solve than pure hydrogen but it has similar problems to electric as far as infrastructure goes.
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A lot more places have electricity than natural gas pipelines. It's cheap to install an electric socket to charge an electric car. Everyone could easily do this at their house or business. I have friends who have Nissan Leaf cars and they just plug them into the garage outlet.
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Hydrogen also takes a lot of energy to split from water. Technically it is renewable... and it also is energy source independent (got a hydro plant nearby, like Paraguay, then there may be energy to spare.) This can be a good thing, because the vehicle isn't tied to petroleum like it would be with CNG/LNG or other fossil fuels.
I personally like the idea of getting away from anything dino related as fuel, be it batteries, a la Tesla, or hydrogen fuel. This is going to have to happen sooner or later, and b
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Much cheaper and easier to just install an electric plug for your electric car. Electricity is available just about everywhere (and a lot more places than natural gas).
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Well, first you'd need to find a place with a nitrogen-cooled tank made out of a special alloy open-cell metal foam encased in a high-pressure-rated carbon fiber hull. Hydrogen is incredibly difficult to store, and requires specialized equipment and constant active cooling, which means running pumps and high-power apparatuses to continuously refine and condense liquid nitrogen and dry ice coolant.
Your car would store the hydrogen less efficiently: parking for a long time would drain your tank, so infre
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If one were to buy one of these, how would one proceed to fill up? Would it be a viable transportation option for a road trip?
Chickens and eggs; no_demand/not_viable to build hydrogen filling stations until there are enough cars -- people will not buy cars that might leave then stranded far from a hydrogen filling station. The (interim) solution has got to be dual fuel - a car that can run on either hydrogen or petrol. I don't see this as impossible, both burn a fluid to generate heat. If there are tax incentives on hydrogen (ie no/little fuel tax) then the number of these things will grow.
Petrol: note to those in the USA: I mean
That's the point! (Score:2)
Purely battery electrical vehicles give customers control of charging their cars. You only need a
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