Hydrogen cars and other alternative fueled vehicles
By melanie652
@melanie652 (2524)
United States
December 3, 2006 9:18am CST
I saw on the news today about an alternative fuel car show in California. We've already seen the hybrids and bio-diesel vehicles. Now the next generation is hydrogen. The by product is water when it burns off! Are these vehicles the wave of the future?
1 person likes this
4 responses
@ChewySpree (1832)
• United States
9 Dec 06
I have read a little bit about these too and I find the concept very exciting. I understand we're still quite a way from the point of these being available to the mass market, but still, the fact that this is coming is great. I can't wait personally.
2 people like this
@melanie652 (2524)
• United States
9 Dec 06
I think it's a good thing too. I wonder if in 10-20 years we'll be complaining about the price of hydrogen at the pump instead of the price of gas?! Thanksk for your response.
1 person likes this
@iambeauty (93)
• India
3 Dec 06
yes now a research centre has invented a car which runs on nothing which is from the power of magnets ,i dont know how they do , but you run the car for lifetime without nothing and zero maintenance and its real, what do you think about this?
@melanie652 (2524)
• United States
4 Dec 06
That's amazing! I've never heard of that before? No maintenance, no gas to pay for, that would be great. A few years ago I remember a guy invented a car that would run on water. Of course you don't hear anything about that now? I've wondered if the gas companies or car companies "squashed" the idea?
@dnatureofdtrain (5273)
• Janesville, Wisconsin
27 Apr 07
They have even invented and engine that converts sound to electricity hooked up to a sterling engine somehow. And Sterling engines can run on differences of air temperature, it is very neat the technology they have... I Love the magnet idea, I hope to see one of those in the future, there is other types of Fuel Cells too. That the gases are set up just right in the cell that the battery keeps rotating and it suppose to last as long as the encasing of the battery lasts. - DNatureofDTrain
1 person likes this
@melanie652 (2524)
• United States
9 Dec 06
I would think it'd be easier on the environment than gas too? Thanks for your response.
1 person likes this