ericgibbs said:In the event of an impact/crash the petrol tank is liable to rupture and the petrol be ignited by the crushed battery wiring.
You've been watching too many American films!
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ericgibbs said:In the event of an impact/crash the petrol tank is liable to rupture and the petrol be ignited by the crushed battery wiring.
Nigel Goodwin said:You've been watching too many American films!- the chances of crashed cars catching on fire is extremly low.
Nigel Goodwin said:Read the last line of that clip!
Notice also it says "road vehicle fires" and not "crash fires", the majority of vehicle fires aren't during a crash.
ericgibbs said:I did read the last line..
If it makes you happy, I will drop/retract the 'crash' word...![]()
and substitute 'road vehicle fires'..
The point I was making and still making is, the present attitude to H&S regarding 'new' ideas for fuels.
We seem to accept that petrol and other hydrocarbon fuels are an acceptable risk, but cleaner fuels like hydrogen are 'dangerous'.
I would support the OP's idea of the introduction of 'cleaner' fuels.![]()
Do you recall in the 1950's being promised that each home would have its own nuclear reactor by the year 2000, about the size of a domestic refuse bin.![]()
ericgibbs said:hi John,
Slightly off topic.
Then some young inventor comes along and says, I have developed an engine that runs on highly inflammable petrol. To make it run any distance the car needs to carry around 20gallons of petrol in a flimsy tank made from 2mm thick mild steel. (snip)
In the event of an impact/crash the petrol tank is liable to rupture and the petrol be ignited by the crushed battery wiring.
Usually, homemade methane can not be compressed into a liquid due to its high oxygen content, it will detonate under pressure.
Pommie said:On the subject of Hydrogen in cars, Hydrogen is liquid at 5000psi, Butane at 80psi. A Hydrogen cylinder is a potential bomb even without ignition. Both figures are from memory but are (I think) in the right ball park.
Mike.
jpanhalt said:Good point -- hydrogen is usually shipped at a much higher pressure than butane. However, remember there is also the critical temperature to consider. Hydrogen is a gas at temperatures above -240 °C; the critical temp for butane is +153 °C. Liquid hydrogen is maintained in cryogenic vessels for that reason. John
jpanhalt said:hydrogen is usually shipped at a much higher pressure than butane. However, remember there is also the critical temperature to consider. Hydrogen is a gas at temperatures above -240 °C; the critical temp for butane is +153 °C. Liquid hydrogen is maintained in cryogenic vessels for that reason. John
audioguru said:A hydrogen accident won't burn, it will explode. BOOM.
crashsite said:Or, to put it into a more ABC level, with a modest solar array, can you perhaps generate sufficient hydrogen to (after all costs of collection, transportation, storage and distribution) at least cover the family's own hydrogen car needs with a little left over that the government can magnamoniously give it to the poor?
audioguru said:I saw on TV a truck full of gasoline had an accident and the gasoline flowed down a street covered with snow and caught on fire. It was spectacular and nobody was hurt. Lots of black smoke.
A hydrogen accident won't burn, it will explode. BOOM.