I’ve driven lots of cars. I’ve wallowed like a Russian oligarch pig in the gorgeous mud of a $1.6 million Bugatti Veyron. I’ve spit tailpipe fire across the midnight Mojave at the wheel of a Lamborghini. I’ve brushed gape-mouthed peasants aside with the…
Entries from February 2009
Honda’s grand, lovely and pricey boondoggle (San Francisco Chronicle)
February 28th, 2009 · No Comments
Tags: Hydrogen Car
Fuel economy: NW man converts old cars to hybrids (Cypress Sun)
February 28th, 2009 · No Comments
Like most people, real estate agent and loan officer T.C. Clark wasn’t thrilled when gas prices started hovering around $4 last year. And he made sure he let his wife know about it.
Tags: Hydrogen Car
A toast to the enzyme cocktail
February 28th, 2009 · No Comments
Scott Beale / Laughing Squid Fuel cells and hydrogen were the buzz for years in U.S. automotive industry, until foreign competitors began making waves with hybrids. Problems with the H included the high cost of infrastructure and the fossil-fuel energy needed to make hydrogen stations work. That could change if new research on enzymes is realized. A team of scientists from Virginia Tech, Oak Ridge National Lab and the University of Georgia has developed a way of producing hydrogen gas b
Tags: Hydrogen Car
Ionic Air Purifier Technologies – Defender or Destroyer?
February 28th, 2009 · No Comments
I ntroduction Ionic air purifiers hold the promise of clean air, purified of all known harmful contaminants that threaten our health. Naked eyes cannot see these harmful contaminants. Invisible ions battling invisible contaminants appears to make perfect sense. Intuitively, the logic is appealing. Unfortunately, there is no simple solution as google throws up an avalanche of controversy within seconds. Obviously, I must resist the urge to go by intuition and grab the first ionic air purifi
Tags: Hydrogen Car
Tissue from Bikini Atoll N-test victim uncovered
February 27th, 2009 · No Comments
Tissue from Bikini Atoll N-test victim uncovered The Yomiuri Shimbun HIROSHIMA–A science laboratory in Hiroshima is in possession of tissue samples believed to be from a Japanese sailor who died soon after being exposed to radiation during a U.S. hydrogen bomb test in 1954, it has been learned. Aikichi Kuboyama, then 40, was a radio operator aboard the fishing trawler Fukuryu Maru No. 5, which was near Bikini Atoll in the Pacific Ocean when the test was conducted. He died six months later.
Tags: Hydrogen Car

















