Prototype Future Cars
Jules Verne, the famous science fiction writer of more than 100 years ago, once said, "…I believe that water
will one day be employed as a fuel." He was right, and there are prototype future cars to prove it. In fact, there
are ordinary cars too using water as a main constituent of the fuel being burned in the car.
In the past 10 years, over 100 prototype future cars have been launched to the public by many of the major car
companies worldwide. Hardly anyone knows about them, however, and hardly anyone cares, it seems.
These cars are not being made by unknown car companies, but by names such as, Honda, DaimlerChrysler, BMW,
Toyota, Ford, Nissan, and GM. All of these household car names currently have prototype future cars on show.
These cars usually have a unique power source, or a more efficient version of an existing one. Hydrogen powered
cars feature a lot in prototype future cars, as do electric cars. In fact, the Kaz Limousine Eliica from Japan is
very unusual among prototype future cars. It is powered by lithium-ion batteries and can zip up to a highly
impressive 240 miles per hour!
Jules Verne's belief that water would be employed as a fuel is being proven correct with the popular adaption of
standard internal combustion engines to run on a mixture of gasoline and HHO. The HHO, a stable gas of two parts
hydrogen and one part oxygen, is produced by electrolysis using the car battery and some water.
This is not the same as prototype future cars is the strictest sense, but using water as a fuel source has long
been a dream, and now the dream has come true. It is reasonable to assume that someone will take up the idea and
produce prototype future cars that don't use kits, but that have all they need to burn water built into their
production.
In today's atmosphere of keeping the environment pollution-free, the idea of powering a car on air is an
attractive one. It may therefore interest you to learn that there are prototype future cars that can do just that!
The MDI City-CAT (compressed air technology) uses air as its motive force and rightly claims to be the cleanest car
around.
A cryogenic heat engine is used by the CooLN2Car. This latest offering of the prototype future cars runs on
liquid nitrogen. It has been developed through research by scientists at the University of North Texas. The car is
highly efficient and is causing a lot of interest.
Many of today's prototype future cars are powered by electricity. The technology has come a long way since even
a few decades ago. Now electric cars have power equivalent to big engines with the capabilities of long distance
travel between re-charging.
It is probably the hybrid prototype future cars that are causing the most interest, however. They tend to offer
the best of all possible worlds. The hybrid motive power can be traditional gasoline, electricity, or even
hydrogen. The best of the prototype future cars allows the driver to switch between power sources, depending on
conditions or simply preference.
Cars That Run on Water Tip #1
No matter what anybody tells you, there is not yet a water powered car in production. That is an urban myth that
reached its peak with Stanley Meyer who claimed that he drove one hundred miles using only four ounces of water (he
was later convicted of fraud). The water powered engine hasn't even been invented yet. Scientists are still trying
to figure out if it is even possible.
Cars That Run on Water Tip #2
Many major car manufacturers are embracing the idea of the hydrogen car. BMW hopes to release a hydrogen car to
the public by 2008 (or 2010 at the latest) and other manufacturers like Toyota are also making plans to release
hydrogen car lines. Of course the debate over using hydrogen in cars is still raging and nothing has been settled
yet.
Cars That Run on Water Tip #3
While both a water based engine and a hydrogen engine will do wonders for fuel emissions and the environment,
one of the major reasons people want them is to improve their fuel mileage. Of course, gas mileage can be improved
right now. You can improve your gas mileage drastically just by driving sensibly and making sure your car is
maintained properly.
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