| Toyota Unveils Fuel Cell Hybrid with 500+ Mile Range |
| Written by Andrew Williams | ||
| Monday, 09 June 2008 | ||
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The FCHV-adv (standing for Fuel Cell Hybrid Vehicle-advanced), combines on-board high-pressure hydrogen tanks with advanced fuel-cell stack technology. According to the Ignition performance, an issue that has often plagued fuel cell development, has also been tested successfully by the There is no news yet on a potential release date or price for the FCHV-adv. However, Via Motortorque and Automotive Business Review
Comments
(3)
Plug-in fuel cell car?
written by Ovidiu S , June 09, 2008
Why don't they use the great properties of water, and supply a plug through which the car can connect to a power source and do some electrolysis, to make hydrogen? If there aren't any hydrogen refueling stations, where do I charge it from? I still think electric cars are the way... If you want to read more of this, go to greenoptimistic.com
Re: Plug-in fuel cell car?
written by Stever , June 10, 2008
Ovidiu;
In reply to your comment. I think the heart of the issue is that businesses want to keep making money by developing products where you will have to buy more things from them in the future. Sure, people can make money by selling you an electric car, but more people can make more money by selling you fuel, maintenance etc. I think this is behind why the US Pharmaceutical companies keep turning drugs that alleviate chronic conditions instead of curing them. They simply invest their money looking for drugs that help, instead of looking for cures. Businesses want repeat customers.
...
written by paolo , June 10, 2008
Of course electric cars are the way.... they're three times more efficient than hydrogen, before you even look at the science-fiction levels of infrastructure needed to get h-cars off the ground,,, but the big auto makers will keep holding out on electrics because daddy Big Oil can't make money out of recharging electric cars.
Until you take energy out of the economic equation there will be people trying to sell you fuel.... even if that fuel is bad for the planet, or horrendously inefficient and unworkable like hydrogen. In the meantime, write your car makers telling them that you will not purchase a vehicle unless it is a battery electric. | ||
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