Believe it or not, electric cars have been around for a very long time. In the early 1900s, there were more electric cars than there were gasoline powered cars. Back in the early 1920s when vehicles were becoming more popular, gasoline was very expensive. It also was hard to start a gasoline engine, you had to turn and turn and turn a crank in front of the car to get it to start. There was no key to start the car like we have today.
Gasoline vehicles were also noisy and put out lots of smoke. The cars either had no mufflers, or the mufflers did not do a good job. So, electric vehicles were a big hit. At one time there were 50,000 of them on the roads and streets of the United States.
But electric cars soon faded away like the horse drawn carriage. New ways to make gasoline cheaply were being discovered. A new invention called an electric starter was made. It started an electric car with a key instead of a crank. A gasoline car could go much farther than an electric one. So, gasoline powered vehicles soon became the main method of transporting people.
Now that there is a push for cleaner green cars, electricity is once again being looked to as a way to help reduce greenhouse gases released into the air by gasoline and electric cars could be one of the answers to this problem.
Electric cars do not burn gasoline in an engine. They use electricity stored on the car in batteries. Sometimes, 12 or 24 batteries, or more, are needed to power the car. Just like a remote controlled, model electric car, electric cars have an electric motor that turns the wheels and a battery to run that motor.
To charge an electric cars batteries, the car is usually plugged in at night. Some electric cars can plug right into a regular electrical wall outlet. Others need a larger outlet, like the kind that a stove or electric clothes dryer plug into. Electricity, is then stored in the batteries of the car.
The batteries can be lead acid batteries, like the batteries you find in our flashlight or in regular gasoline cars. Or they can be ni cad nickel cadmium like the kind that run portable video recorders or a portable video game player only much larger. Better batteries that hold more energy and last longer are being developed. In 2001, by the time todays fifth graders are ready to drive, electric cars should be able to travel 150 to 200 miles before recharging.
Car manufacturers and scientists are constantly coming up with new ways to fuel our vehicles in a cleaner, more environmentally friendly way. The production of the electric car is an exciting one that is being embraced by more and more people every year.
Watch the video related to Hydrogen Engine
This was made in one hour out of old junk I had lying around. The metal tube is from TV aerial, hoses from old washer. The oil feed is a eye dropper. I use a drill bit for the reactor rod. It runs fine on 20% gas 80% water and water is being depleted although not as fast as the gas. In this video the motor is running on roughly 10% gas 40% old methanol 50% water. This is the highest rpm I can get from this mix with this crude design. The motor is 30cc ryobi line trimmer with missing carb and gas tank.
Help answer the question about Hydrogen Engine
How can I retrofit my 2.8L 4cyl gasoline engine, to take hydrogen?
BMW has already done this. With just a few modifications, costing no more than a few hundred dollars(or maybe a little bit – or a lot – more, who knows?) a 750hl engine produced more horsepower with better fuel economy, on hydrogen.
I saw it on the discovery channel and they said it can be done with any gasoline fed engine.
*sorry I meant 1.8L
About Author
Hilal Abdelwali -
About the Author:
For A Limited Time, Hilal Abdelwali the owner of
http://www.thehybridcarssite.com
is giving away a FREE REPORT on secrets of choosing alternative fuels. Get your
free report worth $27 now at
http://www.idoiteasily.com/alternativefuels/report.htm
August 6th, 2010
admin
Posted in
Tags: