Toyota now have a car you can refill with hydrogen anywhere you like, Electric is not the way forward and the governments know this it is a stop gap
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Toyota now have a car you can refill with hydrogen anywere you like,
Sorry Rod, you're wrong on all counts.Toyota now have a car you can refill with hydrogen anywere you like,
Rodcx500z said:
Toyota now have a car you can refill with hydrogen anywere you like,
DD2 - Anywhere you like, except it's not sold anywhere.
Sorry Rod, you're wrong on all counts.
So it seems that these hydrogen cartridges are envisioned as being able to charge EVs? That's not going to replace the EV then, just provide a different charging method.
Rod meant by using the cartridges he linked to in post #3 -
Toyota's portable hydrogen cartridges look like giant AA batteries – and could spell the end of lengthy EV charging
https://www.techradar.com/vehicle-t...nd-could-spell-the-end-of-lengthy-ev-charging
View attachment 104974
As in as quick as filling an iceSo it seems that these hydrogen cartridges are envisioned as being able to charge EVs? That's not going to replace the EV then, just provide a different charging method.
As in as quick as filling an ice
That's what makes it hard to storeit's the flipping high pressures, depending on which "Standard" you use.
An the period table gives us a clue. H¹ one molecule. So it has the propensity to leak.
What’s not to like. Given that’s its likely to be around 5 years away*, assuming scalability and availability problems are overcome, it will have to compete with whatever the current, readily available technologies have evolved into.You don't need garages you stick it in your car and away you go, when it gets low you swap it like you would a soda stream, and the Hi Lux in the video has a greater range than it's full EV brother with no drop off in range in winter, so in one swoop Toyota have killed the argument about the money and cost of investment needed to build fueling stations, very very clever i like it
Not that smallI would venture these are ammonia for cracking in a hi tech fuel cell. But that's a guess. But it would certainly be why they are small and light.
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