Level Extreme platform
Subscription
Corporate profile
Products & Services
Support
Legal
Français
Water powered car
Message
From
15/06/2007 20:27:51
 
 
To
15/06/2007 16:13:57
General information
Forum:
Visual FoxPro
Category:
Other
Miscellaneous
Thread ID:
01232481
Message ID:
01233690
Views:
10
When I was a kid, about 452 years ago, we used to make our own hydrogen for use in balloons. We'd use an A&W root beer gallon jug to disolve household lye in water, then we'd drop aluminum into the mix and put the balloon over the opening of the jug. It worked fine but the bottle became a bit hot after a while. BTW the mixture might disolve your hand if you get some on it. And that was just the simple stuff we did ;-)

>What do you think of this?
>http://news.uns.purdue.edu/x/2007a/070515WoodallHydrogen.html
>Sammie
>
>>Good luck finding a hyrdogen powered car on your road in the next 10 years...
>>
>>+++ Rick ---
>>
>>>> these blasts can level large areas upwards of 1Km blast radius.
>>>
>>>I'll have to remember that if I ever see a hydrogen powered car on fire!!
>>>
>>>><snip> All that gas under pressure? What about accidents? Kaboom!
>>>>
>>>>Hydrogen is pretty safe, if the pressure vessel is punctured it vents to atmosphere and being lighter than air leaves the area quickly, whereas petrol vapour being heavier than air pools on the ground waiting for an ignition source.
>>>>
>>>>The only problem with hydrogen is confined spaces where it can mix to the right proportions and cause a major explosion.
>>>>
>>>>Also with any liquified gas like LPG or Hydrogen you have the risk of a BLEVE (Boiling Liquid Expanding Vapour Explosion) if you have flame inpingment on the pressure vessel which causes the vessel to fail. Another name for BLEVE is "Blast Leveling Everything Very Effectively", these blasts can level large areas upwards of 1Km blast radius.
I ain't skeert of nuttin eh?
Yikes! What was that?
Previous
Next
Reply
Map
View

Click here to load this message in the networking platform