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#31
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On Oct 18, 1:37*pm, wrote:
Mark wrote: On Oct 17, 9:36*pm, wrote: Mark wrote: Because electric airplanes are soon to replace the fossil fueled redneck planes. If by soon you mean maybe in 50 years or so. http://energysavinggadgets.net/world...-airplane/2009.... Oh, wow, a single place airplane that can fly for all of 2 hours. Whoopee. It will fly for 20 hours by using the proven battery technology which has already been developed at the Univ. of Maryland. The "self-assembly" prevalent with nanoengineering was achieved with the M13 tobacco virus, creating an energy density ten times that of a lithium ion battery. You mean it will fly powered by a breathless press release and doesn't need a battery that is actually in production? You mean it should be kept a secret until they carry it at Walmart? (cause you keep implying this) Guess you don't know what proof of concept means. -- Mark -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - |
#32
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On Oct 18, 1:35*pm, wrote:
Mark wrote: On Oct 18, 8:29*am, Mark wrote: On Oct 17, 9:36*pm, wrote: Mark wrote: Because electric airplanes are soon to replace the fossil fueled redneck planes. If by soon you mean maybe in 50 years or so. http://energysavinggadgets.net/world...-airplane/2009... Oh, wow, a single place airplane that can fly for all of 2 hours. Whoopee. Electric planes will replace internal combustion airplanes. Not in the lifetime of anyone old enough to read this. -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. Polymer exchange membrane fuel cells:http://auto.howstuffworks.com/fuel-e...ve-fuels/fuel-... More specifically, your hydrogen is easily obtained by even the poorest of solar panels. Typical naive comment; it is techincally easy to obtain hydrogen though not particularly cheap to do so and a giant pain in the butt to collect, store, and transport. Once again, you don't know what either I, or you, are talking about. Artificial photosynthesis splits water at low voltage, and the recombination of it creates electric voltage. This will charge batteries to serve all our flying needs. As usual, no sense whatsoever for the big picture, much like your thinking that Part 141 schools are the entirety of flight training. I never made that claim. You got lost (as usual) in your own alzheimer world of pig headedness. I simply told you that at a 141 school they won't give you credit to just go and practice what interests you, and in most cases they won't give you the plane keys. In turn, you wasted considerable bandwidth arguing different topics as your mind meandered to them. End of Story. --- Mark -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - |
#33
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On Oct 18, 1:35*pm, wrote:
More specifically, your hydrogen is easily obtained by even the poorest of solar panels. Typical naive comment; it is techincally easy to obtain hydrogen though not particularly cheap to do so and a giant pain in the butt to collect, store, and transport. It is very cheap to obtain hydrogen, easy to collect, easy to store, easy to transport. This is a fact. But there is no need to transport it anywhere. It is best used to make electricity. --- Mark |
#34
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On Oct 18, 4:17*pm, george wrote:
On Oct 19, 6:35*am, wrote: Typical naive comment; it is techincally easy to obtain hydrogen though not particularly cheap to do so and a giant pain in the butt to collect, store, and transport. The Zeppelin was an example of hydrogen and aviation not mixing The Hindenburg was sabotaged. --- Mark |
#35
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On Mon, 18 Oct 2010 16:18:21 -0700 (PDT), Mark wrote:
It is very cheap to obtain hydrogen, easy to collect, easy to store, easy to transport. This is a fact. But there is no need to transport it anywhere. It is best used to make electricity. I invented hydrogen. In fact, I fart it. --- Mark ooooooooooooooooooooooooK |
#36
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On Mon, 18 Oct 2010 19:21:56 -0400, Ted Sherman wrote:
On Mon, 18 Oct 2010 16:18:21 -0700 (PDT), Mark wrote: It is very cheap to obtain hydrogen, easy to collect, easy to store, easy to transport. This is a fact. But there is no need to transport it anywhere. It is best used to make electricity. I invented hydrogen. In fact, I fart it. --- Mark ooooooooooooooooooooooooK Would you consider lighting one of those farts and blowing your butt off? TIA. lol -- A fireside chat not with Ari! http://tr.im/holj Motto: Live To Spooge It! |
#37
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On Oct 18, 7:23*pm, Ari Silverstein wrote:
On Mon, 18 Oct 2010 19:21:56 -0400, Ted Sherman wrote: On Mon, 18 Oct 2010 16:18:21 -0700 (PDT), Mark wrote: It is very cheap to obtain hydrogen, easy to collect, easy to store, easy to transport. This is a fact. But there is no need to transport it anywhere. It is best used to make electricity. I invented hydrogen. In fact, I fart it. --- Mark ooooooooooooooooooooooooK Would you consider lighting one of those farts and blowing your butt off? TIA. lol -- A fireside chat not with Ari!http://tr.im/holj Motto: Live To Spooge It! Water and steam turbos are every where. TreBert |
#38
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Mark wrote:
On Oct 18, 1:35Â*pm, wrote: Mark wrote: On Oct 18, 8:29Â*am, Mark wrote: On Oct 17, 9:36Â*pm, wrote: Mark wrote: Because electric airplanes are soon to replace the fossil fueled redneck planes. If by soon you mean maybe in 50 years or so. http://energysavinggadgets.net/world...-airplane/2009... Oh, wow, a single place airplane that can fly for all of 2 hours. Whoopee. Electric planes will replace internal combustion airplanes. Not in the lifetime of anyone old enough to read this. -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. Polymer exchange membrane fuel cells:http://auto.howstuffworks.com/fuel-e...ve-fuels/fuel-... More specifically, your hydrogen is easily obtained by even the poorest of solar panels. Typical naive comment; it is techincally easy to obtain hydrogen though not particularly cheap to do so and a giant pain in the butt to collect, store, and transport. Once again, you don't know what either I, or you, are talking about. Artificial photosynthesis splits water at low voltage, and the recombination of it creates electric voltage. This will charge batteries to serve all our flying needs. Maybe in theory, but it has nothing to do with your statement of "...your hydrogen is is easily..." Artificial photosynthesis is yet another labratory "product" with no practical applications or product in sight just like all your other marvels that will be here "any day now". As usual, no sense whatsoever for the big picture, much like your thinking that Part 141 schools are the entirety of flight training. I never made that claim. Correct, you never made that precise statement; what you did was extrapolate on the requirement for Part 141 schools to have a FAA approved syllabus and applied that requirement to all flight training, which is nonsense. Moreover you claimed the FAA provides the syllabus, which is more nonsense. -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
#39
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Mark wrote:
On Oct 18, 1:31Â*pm, wrote: Mark wrote: On Oct 17, 9:36Â*pm, wrote: Mark wrote: Because electric airplanes are soon to replace the fossil fueled redneck planes. If by soon you mean maybe in 50 years or so. http://energysavinggadgets.net/world...-airplane/2009... Oh, wow, a single place airplane that can fly for all of 2 hours. Whoopee. Electric planes will replace internal combustion airplanes. Not in the lifetime of anyone old enough to read this. -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. Polymer exchange membrane fuel cells: http://auto.howstuffworks.com/fuel-e...ve-fuels/fuel-... Let us know when you can run any vehicle on a press release. Ha ha! Let you know when fuel cells run cars? Heh! Guess you haven't hear about Iceland. Where's the production car available to the general public? Yeah, that's right, it doesn't exist other than as press releases. At least you've switched your naive hopes from batteries to a technology that might actually someday be viable as a practical energy source for vehicles. No, the batteries have already been invented. They just haven't been manufactured for consumers yet. The word "invented" does not mean "practical", "producable", or "affordable". -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
#40
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Mark wrote:
On Oct 18, 1:37Â*pm, wrote: Mark wrote: On Oct 17, 9:36Â*pm, wrote: Mark wrote: Because electric airplanes are soon to replace the fossil fueled redneck planes. If by soon you mean maybe in 50 years or so. http://energysavinggadgets.net/world...-airplane/2009... Oh, wow, a single place airplane that can fly for all of 2 hours. Whoopee. It will fly for 20 hours by using the proven battery technology which has already been developed at the Univ. of Maryland. The "self-assembly" prevalent with nanoengineering was achieved with the M13 tobacco virus, creating an energy density ten times that of a lithium ion battery. You mean it will fly powered by a breathless press release and doesn't need a battery that is actually in production? You mean it should be kept a secret until they carry it at Walmart? (cause you keep implying this) No, I mean it doesn't exist as a production item and probably won't in the lifetime of anyone currently reading this. The value of a press release is the value of the paper it is printed on at the recycle center. Guess you don't know what proof of concept means. I know what "proof of concept" means. What you don't seem to know is that "proof of concept" does not mean any of "producable", "in production", "practical", or "affordable". -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
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