Front page of MSNBC.com / Hydrogen RE
Front page of MSNBC.com / Hydrogen RE
This is sort of old news for us.. but cool to see this on the front page of MSNBC.com
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/32658132..._drivers_seat/
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/32658132..._drivers_seat/
At a recent preview of Mazda’s 2010 product line, the maker unveiled two rotary-powered prototypes running on hydrogen, rather than gasoline. Many experts believe hydrogen could become the fuel of the future.
I like reading rotary love in the mainstream media because these cars/engines are anything but mainstream.
I think too that Mazda will keep rotaries around for more reasons than one now.
I think too that Mazda will keep rotaries around for more reasons than one now.
I don't know much (read: anything) about hydrogen practicality or infrastructure, but it does make me a bit optimistic that Mazda is experimenting with it.
Sure, it creates a totally lame 100hp and change, but remember the Ford 999? Impressive technology back in the day, but was a race car with an 11.5 liter engine producing 100hp... Look how far we've come from that point with gasoline, and tell me you can't be a bit hopeful about hydrogen.
Sure, it creates a totally lame 100hp and change, but remember the Ford 999? Impressive technology back in the day, but was a race car with an 11.5 liter engine producing 100hp... Look how far we've come from that point with gasoline, and tell me you can't be a bit hopeful about hydrogen.
I don't know much (read: anything) about hydrogen practicality or infrastructure, but it does make me a bit optimistic that Mazda is experimenting with it.
Sure, it creates a totally lame 100hp and change, but remember the Ford 999? Impressive technology back in the day, but was a race car with an 11.5 liter engine producing 100hp... Look how far we've come from that point with gasoline, and tell me you can't be a bit hopeful about hydrogen.
Sure, it creates a totally lame 100hp and change, but remember the Ford 999? Impressive technology back in the day, but was a race car with an 11.5 liter engine producing 100hp... Look how far we've come from that point with gasoline, and tell me you can't be a bit hopeful about hydrogen.
^^^Very, very true.
However I would think that the 100 ponies are because it's still a dual fuel [flex?] engine.
I think if they could get it to 150 -170 hp and keep the freakin' pounds off [let's say 2200 lbs to 2400 lbs] then it would be good enough for today.
Good enough for me anyway.
If Hydro is the future I think hydrogen sports car will be what we call slow and under power by today's standards for a while.
But I'll take a lower hp hydrogen rotary sports car over an ugly plain econobox any day.
Last edited by Hidef1080; Sep 4, 2009 at 06:42 AM.
^^^Very, very true.
However I would think that the 100 ponies are because it's still a dual fuel [flex?] engine.
I think if they could get it to 150 -170 hp and keep the freakin' pounds off [let's say 2200 lbs to 2400 lbs] then it would be good enough for today.
Good enough for me anyway.
If Hydro is the future I think hydrogen sports car will be what we call slow and under power by today's standards for a while.
But I'll take a lower hp hydrogen rotary sports car over an ugly plain econobox any day.
However I would think that the 100 ponies are because it's still a dual fuel [flex?] engine.
I think if they could get it to 150 -170 hp and keep the freakin' pounds off [let's say 2200 lbs to 2400 lbs] then it would be good enough for today.
Good enough for me anyway.
If Hydro is the future I think hydrogen sports car will be what we call slow and under power by today's standards for a while.
But I'll take a lower hp hydrogen rotary sports car over an ugly plain econobox any day.
I wouldn't say that Hydrogen is a dead end, sure, the Hydrogen ICE may not become standard, but at some point humanity will have to turn to Hydrogen for energy... it being the most abundant element in the Universe and all. Baby steps...
I really hope H fuel cells replace batteries in EV cars, that way the dullards can have their vehicle/appliances, while I can still have an ICE with a pulse.
Last edited by j_tso; Sep 5, 2009 at 11:28 PM.
ts always great to see any kind distuptive technology from an automaker. Put that to an RX8 and a few people here might just have raised interest.
Hydrogen is years away. CNG is already here. It surprises me that hasn't been added to the program.
Hydrogen takes up a significant volume in the intake manifold - direct injection won't be something coming as hydrogen wreaks havoc on some metals that would be used for a direct setup. 100HP on hydrogen is probably optomistic.
Hydrogen is years away. CNG is already here. It surprises me that hasn't been added to the program.
Hydrogen takes up a significant volume in the intake manifold - direct injection won't be something coming as hydrogen wreaks havoc on some metals that would be used for a direct setup. 100HP on hydrogen is probably optomistic.
That could happen, someone in Australia has an RX-7 running on LPG. The Japanese love Hydrogen because of its zero-emissions, and since they're on nuclear power, the whole "burning more coal" argument doesn't apply to them.
No, Mazda's hydrogen rotary is direct injection.
Are we going to travel to the sun every night (when it cools down) to fill up on hydrogen?
Okay smartass.
Are we going to biodegrade swamps to the point of coal every time we want to heat our house?
What is the makeup of the earth? oh, thats right 70% water, and 67% of each molecule is hydrogen. Thats quite a bit of hydrogen now isn't it. Wow! how super!
guess what hydrogen is also the most abundant element on earth. Not just the universe. It is the future. While not necessarily energy efficient yet, it will be the future.
Okay smartass.
Are we going to biodegrade swamps to the point of coal every time we want to heat our house?
What is the makeup of the earth? oh, thats right 70% water, and 67% of each molecule is hydrogen. Thats quite a bit of hydrogen now isn't it. Wow! how super!
guess what hydrogen is also the most abundant element on earth. Not just the universe. It is the future. While not necessarily energy efficient yet, it will be the future.
Are we going to biodegrade swamps to the point of coal every time we want to heat our house?
What is the makeup of the earth? oh, thats right 70% water, and 67% of each molecule is hydrogen. Thats quite a bit of hydrogen now isn't it. Wow! how super!
guess what hydrogen is also the most abundant element on earth. Not just the universe. It is the future. While not necessarily energy efficient yet, it will be the future.


