Bosnian....not a single power plant in Jamaica runs off coal my friend. Thus NONE of our electricity comes from coal. And just so we are clear, hydrogen is not extracted from water using power from coal. It's extracted using an electric current passed through an ionised solution of water. This electric current can come from anywhere, not just from coal burnt in a steam turbine.BosnianLanos wrote:Yeah, the coal thing is true. To separate water into its separate parts, they use power from burning coal, which is copius in pollutants. Just heating it won't do anything expect make water vapor. I don't think that solar energy would be efficient enough to produce enough pure hydrogen for the world. Sun power is unreliable, which is why most of our electricity still comes from coal burning power plants.
When they break how much will they cost to repair and who will repair them? Do you think Honda and Toyota give a crap about us when this happens? They set their price and if you can't afford it screw you, go buy a Daewoo!Electric Hybrids are the best thing we have so far. Yes they are slow, yes they are complicatedly computerized, but they are worth the money. I'm sure the battery packs will dry up, but engines and transmissions also blow up, and people replace them. At 60 MPG I will take that chance
Batteries, like memory in computers, are the weakest link. They are expensive and are at present exceedingly inefficient. That's why manufacturers are half-stepping on the technology. Trying to bamboozle us into thinking hybrids are so great.Erfinder@PrecisionBoost wrote:Sure you have to replace the batteries ever couple of years but the savings in gasoline and regular engine maintinence is fairly significant
I sincerely hope not.All vehicles will end up being electric one day
Erfinder...what are you saying here my brother?!? Hydrogen CANNOT be made from carbon. Hydrogen is an element, as is carbon. What you are proposing here is some SERIOUS nuclear fission! For those curious, this is the breaking apart of the nucleus of an element so creating a new (less dense) nucleus and thus a new element. Small elements such as carbon, cannot be made to undergo fission either.So far the best hyrdrogen is made from carbon and it's electricly charged to attract the molecules to a center electrode
And on top of that...what centre electrode are you talking about?
This needs some attention.