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MiniC.A.T. Urban Air Car Options
 
drunken_mexican
#1 Posted : 3/24/2007 5:20:30 PM
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Take a look at the link for pictures and pretty cool video. htt...=4820 MiniC.A.T Urban Air Car [No viable alternative fuel? Give me a friggin break. -Andre] Bill Christensen Technovelgy . March 22, 2007 The MiniC.A.T Air Car is a remarkable car designed for urban use that costs about one-tenth as much to operate as a car that runs on gas. The MiniC.A.T Air Car, you see, runs on compressed air. The vehicle has a top speed of 68 miles per hour, and a range of 125 to 185 miles (depending on your driving habits and route). This incredible vehicle has a tubular chassis that is glued together (not welded) and a fiberglass body. The car has only one electrical cable (compare this to the wire harnesses found in a standard automobile) because the vehicle uses wireless communication between its components. The engine weighs less than half that of a standard car - no combustion process to withstand. The air “tanks” (there are three) are made of carbon fiber. The car is built to integrate with any external electronic system you could imagine (consider voice recognition, internet connectivity, telephone connectivity, a GPS guidance system, fleet management systems, emergency systems, and digital entertainment devices). A hybrid model is also under development; the gasoline would be used to run a generator to supply compressed air. It is estimated that one tank of fuel would be enough for a cross-country trip. Prices are expected to start at $15,000. What powers it? Ninety cubic meters of air is stored in fiber tanks at high pressure. The expansion of the air stored in the tanks pushes against pistons to create movement. The car’s AC system makes use of the expelled cold air. Oil change (it uses one liter of vegetable oil every 31,000 miles). A “professional” fill-up at a modified gas station (few and far between, obviously, at present) takes about three minutes, and costs about $2. A fill-up with the (included!) small compressor can fill the tank in 3-4 hours when connected to 220V AC. This is a remarkable development; the MiniC.A.T Air Car is just now on the verge of commercial production by the Tata group, India’s largest automotive manufacturer. You might also want to take a look at an earlier predecessor - the Rotary Air Engine created by Angelo di Pietro, which is on the verge of widespread use in a variety of small-engine vehicles. Via gizmag. Scroll down for more stories in the same category. (Story submitted 3/20/2007)
 

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Taliesin the Alchemist
#2 Posted : 3/30/2007 12:30:49 AM
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This'll probably never be available to Americans, too efficient and thrifty for us pigish wasters over here! LOL Laughing
[img:f1b61c1c99]http://209.235.244.14/www.visioncrystal.com/images/gal-11753.jpg[/img:f1b61c1c99] Psychedelics are probably responsible for every aspect of human evolution apart from the decline in body hair. ~Terence McKenna
 
MrM
#3 Posted : 10/12/2007 6:22:01 PM
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I was reading about this a while back. It seems like a really good idea; a bit like an electric car only it can be filled up quicker as you just need an air compressor at a pumping station rather than plugging it in the mains overnight. Don't think that this means the car actually runs on 'air power' though. The car still runs on (mostly) fossil fuels as the air compressor will run off electricity to get the air into the cars air tanks. Most countries still generate the majority of their electricity via polluting fossil fuel power stations so this car is not completely 'green'. It is an improvement though. It is more efficient to have the fossil fuels being burnt in one power station where the pollution can either be controlled directly or eventually elliminated through alternative means (wind power etc / fussion etc.) than have a petrol burning engine in every vehicle on the road.
 
 
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