Jinxed
31st August 2006 - 04:20 AM
QUOTE (FutureBoy+Aug 10 2006, 03:39 AM)
http://www.physorg.com/news74351551.html In the future Hybrid cars use the "BallBot" concept to conserve fuel and increasing the vehicle speed.
Imagine as the car gaining speed on the freeway all four wheels retract and the
"BallBot" finds the center gravity of the car and lowers itself to the ground ..in a way taking over the job of the wheels.
Since the car is rolling over the ball the friction will be cut dramatically , the speed will increase proportionately and lets not mention the fuel conservation.
As the car slows down , the wheels come out , and take over.
The infrastructure needed to implement this type of idea would be staggering. And what about weight distribution? What about air resistance? I'm assuming the ball wouldn't be able to reposition itself under the car... Sorry, there's just no way this would be practical...
The money would be better spent on hydrogen systems. (IMO)
niftyswell
8th February 2007 - 09:49 AM
I think the practicality of this concept is to be able to keep it lightweight for use as a robot. On a car you need friction for braking, turning, for propulsion, friction requires wear- ask any tire mfg, balls don't wear evenly when ridden on. A ball that a car can balance on will require a lot of weight and probably not be inflatable. Finally, a car hardly ever has even enough weight distribution to make the single ball concept seem plausible to me. Different passenger and cargo configurations need to be considered.
Back to the bot concept- They need to incorporate this into a model able to navigate stairs to be practical. I think that is why they stated the office environment because they figured elevators would be available. I live in a 2 story home which keeps me from purchasing a roomba. I want a robot that can navigate steps- this doesn't.
FuelCells4Power
26th February 2007 - 07:41 PM
I'm not sure about the vehicle concept put forth in this thread, but the BallBot robot is very intriguing. As we strive to make machines that eventually mimic the human experience, when does Hollywood fantasy become a harbinger of things to come. In our quest to humanize machines that can process information faster than a human, control more of our envirionment than a human, and become stronger than a human ... shouldn't we fear when they become self-aware? Who says Terminator or Battlestar Galatica or iRobot is all in the movies?
EthanolE85
30th May 2007 - 01:24 AM
To understand more why there is a need to use alternative fuel like E85 ethanol fuel, let's first venture into the reason why gasoline doesn't burn cleanly. Gas is made from pure carbon and hydrogen, and is a liquid substance. It also includes carbon chains of different lengths...
You can check out my Green Car (www.greenthingy.blogspot.com) blog for more information...
that_guy
8th March 2008 - 12:45 AM
that's an interesting idea. i don't know though if a hybrid car will still be using the same auto parts like the ones we have today. after all, that piece of technology would have to displace some of the parts on a car if it is indeed to be applied to hybrids.
philip347
18th March 2008 - 11:54 PM
There are a few used Volkswagen Rabbits, that are just sitting near where I’m at.
After gasoline goes through the roof and people cant get to where they need to go, then more than likely their owners will consider changing them to electric capabilities.
CTYankee
22nd March 2008 - 05:55 PM
QUOTE (EthanolE85+May 30 2007, 01:24 AM)
To understand more why there is a need to use alternative fuel like E85 ethanol fuel, let's first venture into the reason why gasoline doesn't burn cleanly. Gas is made from pure carbon and hydrogen, and is a liquid substance. It also includes carbon chains of different lengths...
You can check out my Green Car (www.greenthingy.blogspot.com) blog for more information...
No disrespect intended, but the best information I have seen tells of 1 gallon of gas to produce 1.3 gallons of ethanol.
These numbers should increase in the future but just look at the prices of corn recently. As more farmers switch crops to corn it is driving the price of other dramatically higher.
Wheat, flour and cereal etc. have gone through the roof and will continue to rise.
BTW I recently interviewed for a job at UTC Power, the tour was quite impressive.
They power most of the plant with a Fuelcell that they use natural gas for the cracking process. IMHO, nuclear power the best source in cracking hydrogen at this time.
No oil or other natural resources are consumed in the process.
Wish me luck, I was laid off three days after the interview. The company of which I was employed as been constricting for years, I was lucky to evade the ax as long as I did giving I was the least senior.
newton
3rd August 2008 - 06:02 AM
how about helium balloons to make a car lighter?
that's a damn good idea, right there.
sorry if it sounds mickey mouse, LOL!
wcelliott
3rd August 2008 - 06:00 PM
QUOTE
that's an interesting idea. i don't know though if a hybrid car will still be using the same auto parts like the ones we have today. after all, that piece of technology would have to displace some of the parts on a car if it is indeed to be applied to hybrids.
The key benefit to electric cars is *regenerative braking*. If there were some way to capture the kinetic energy of the car when you hit the brakes, and reuse that energy to speed the car back up when the light changes to green, then the only energy losses would be from rolling friction and aerodynamic drag.
So far, the only way to do regenerative braking is with electric cars.
I think there's a purely mechanical way of implementing regenerative braking, which could be retrofitted to existing vehicles.
Flywheels could be incorporated for energy storage, but you need a continuously-variable transmission to do the braking and acceleration. It doesn't take much of a flywheel to store a car's kinetic energy of, say, 45mph (representative commute speed) for 3 minutes or so (average red light duration). A flywheel capable of storing that much energy would be about the size of a coffee can, maybe a little bigger. Certainly smaller than a hat-box. You could splice the thing to the drive shaft.
newton
4th August 2008 - 04:52 PM
barakn
5th August 2008 - 05:09 AM
QUOTE (newton+Aug 3 2008, 12:02 AM)
how about helium balloons to make a car lighter?
that's a damn good idea, right there.
sorry if it sounds mickey mouse, LOL!
A car's weight helps it stick to the road, especially on curves. Also, the volume of helium necessary to significantly lighten a car's weight would be so large that it would impose a large amount of aerodynamic drag, enough to counteract any benefits from lightening the car. That's a damn stupid idea right there.
newton
6th August 2008 - 08:50 PM
well, if you put the balloons inside the exterior panels, they wouldn't add drag, and the fact is lighter cars get better mileage, so, i don't think it's that stupid.
i didn't mean to imply that the car should be floating and frictionless. just 'weight-relieved'.
i still think it's a good idea.
barakn
7th August 2008 - 11:24 PM
QUOTE (newton+Aug 6 2008, 02:50 PM)
well, if you put the balloons inside the exterior panels, they wouldn't add drag, and the fact is lighter cars get better mileage, so, i don't think it's that stupid.
i didn't mean to imply that the car should be floating and frictionless. just 'weight-relieved'.
i still think it's a good idea.
Apparently you've never been nearly blown off the road in your Geo Metro by a passing semi truck. Light cars are dangerous. And just how much lighter do you think a car would be with only its "exterior panels" filled with helium? How much helium do you think there is on this planet and how quickly do you think helium would escape from "exterior panels?"
newton
8th August 2008 - 03:37 AM
Horta
9th August 2008 - 04:04 AM
I am a female and know little of how cars work but I found this thread interesting. If I am allowed to add my two cents; I wish some of you smart guys who obviously understand what goes on under the hood or bonnet ,if in England, would invent the solar car that runs on the sun. It should be made as such to store the sun's energy for several months in case of too much rain. The sun is free. It is a nuclear furnace that will continue for at least 7 billion more years so the supply is unlimited from our stand point. We do not have to beg the Arabs to use the sun. The sun does not pollute the air. When you invent this really cool car give it to national security so the oil companies won't submarine the invention as with other cool solar cars of the past. I know this is a little off the balls topic thing but while you guys are thinking, I would love someone to make a car that does not pollute but you can still drive fast if you want.
I like the guy who referred to Star Wars because that would be really cool if someone could understand the laws of physics as to defy gravity to have the car float above the road rather than on it. But I think that technology is further off than the idea of a regular wheeled car but with a solar engine.
Krieger der Wahrheit
9th August 2008 - 10:55 PM
I guess you are referring to a hovercraft with the star Wars reference? Can't we do that already? As far as the solar car goes, if we can use solar energy efficiently enough to propel a car at high speeds then it is only sensible to assume that we will also be able to efficiently use solar energy to charge battery type systems that will allow solar energy to be used when access to the sun is restricted.
Horta
12th August 2008 - 03:28 AM
To the best of my knowledge there are no cars that I have seen that civilians can purchase that float like Anakin's speeder or Luke Skywalker's vehicle in Episode IV.
We have solar panels that can heat or cool a home but no storage ability. Tesla invented a solar thing that heated water back in the 1890's. In the 1970's the solar panels that we are familiar with was invented. Both times solar was invented and both times the big oil companies submarined it. So I wish some hot shot brain could invent it and get around big oil threw the military or NSA.
egnorant
12th August 2008 - 03:56 PM
Report on current grassroots research that I have seen.
Hybrid car that parks in its own solar garage that charges batteries all day for charging the car, producing hydrogen/oxygen for the hybrids engine that can also run on natural gas, propane or regular gas.
Batteries also power a variety of household needs, but not all yet!
This car went for 40 days with no power other than that supplied by the garage.
One 380 mile trip needed .7 gallons of gas in addition to electric and hydrogen power.
This using currently available tech and will only get better with better batteries and other advances.
The reason big companies are not on board is twofold....
No profit in home based energy production and immense cost to switch to alternate electric/hydrogen source or provide infrastructure for delivery of hydrogen that can be charged for.
Don't get me started on the technical/sociological aspect versus the political/economic forces at play..it gets scary fast.
Bruce
Horta
12th August 2008 - 11:45 PM
Thank you for the up date on where we are today with regard to alternative cars. Sorry if the politics bothers you. I just naturally think of the reasons we are headed for disaster. I hate greed and stupidity. We have evolved past our lizard brains and have the cerebrum for a long time now. I would think by now we should use our brains to advance mankind rather than continue aggressive competitive behavior of our lizard ancestors. There is a reason I like Carl Sagan, he reminds the world what our minds should be capable of but are ignoring it.
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