Originally posted by Xordan
Exploding petrol is just as deadly as exploding hydrogen.
Petrol doesn\'t explode in the conditions that you have in a car. The highly compressed hydrogen would, however, leave nice little holes in the ground when lit.
Originally posted by lynx_lupoIf it was hidrogen that was burning, you wouldn\'t see it, the flame is invisible to us. And yeah, it\'d be a boom more likely.
The flame is visible, it\'s just that it is blue. And yes, the reaction is extremely exothermic. Don\'t do this at home kids, but if you fill a simple balloon with hydrogen and light it (from a distance, of course) you can feel a sudden heat wave that passes quickly even 5-10 meters away. Feels strange.
Originally posted by zanzibarRace cars run entirely on alcohol
So do some race car drivers, considering the stunts they pull off sometimes.

Originally posted by Xordan
Solar power is a very good technology. I\'m planning on having solar panels on the roof of my house when I\'m older, which should cut my energy bills by quite a bit.
That might depend on the energy prices then. The solar panels cost quite a bit, also they don\'t remain as effective as they are when they are new (efficiency factor is currently about 20% when they are new).
According to wikipedia, the price of one cell with (approx. 10cm? surface) is at roughly 11 EUR (state-of-the-art-cells, efficiency factor above 20%).
*calculates* ...
Given a house of 10x10 meters footpoint, with a roof angle of 45 degrees (which is too much, so lazy me can use Pythagoras

):
2 roof \"halves\", each with 10*sqrt(5? * 5?), that makes roughly 140m?, that\'s about 1,400,000cm?.
I seriously hope I made a mistake there, because that roof is a little expensive (1.5 Millon EUR).
General note):
2H20 + Enegergy -> 2H2 + O2 + thermal energy
2H2 + 02 -> 2H2O + Energy + thermal energy
The first equasion is the one happening when splitting up water into oxygen and hydrogen, the second is the one that applies when burning them together. Both times, you lose energy in form or heat that practically escapes unused.
As there is no efficiency factor of 100%, you will lose quite a lot of energy when splitting up water, especially it\'s a string and stable bond.
This cannot come from nowhere, so you have to put it in. If you have to make your fuel first, just to be able to burn it again, you
lose energy, you don\'t
save it.
Now, a general idea is to use renewable sources like solar energy to gain the hydrogen. That makes sense in a way, beause a) like I said, solar energy counts as renewable source of energy and b) you can\'t mount solar cells on cars (at least not effectivly, also imagine the traffic jam you get stuck in if you don\'t make it home before sunset

)
Either that, or what Cha0s said: Good ol\' nuclear power.
Another attempt, still in the early stages, is using green algae. Basically, they use solar energy as well.