"I totally disagree. If hydrogen is a flamable explosive gas (such as propane, natural gas, methane etc..) then why should it be so hard to run an engine on it? We use many other gas gases. Sure might be concerns such as heat, water, rust, burnt valves, but all can be over come."
I think it's quite easy to run an engine on it. Tricky thing is storing a significant amount of it and doing so safely. Most fuels (like propane or nat. gas etc....) are pretty picky about the fuel air mixture before they can explode. Hydrogen doesnt care hardly at all... just about any amount of oxygen results in an explosive mixture.
"Using an engine to power the process of making the hydrogen to run the engine is in no way perpetual motion! That is almost the same as saying using the engine to produce the power to run an electric feul pump to feed gasoline and injecters is perpetaul motion!
Niether is corect! Water or gasoline is the fuel to run the engine and both will be used up and have to be replaced to keep the engine running."
It is kind of like perpetual motion if you think your going to create it with the same amount, or less - energy than you'll get from burning it. Electrolysis is a very inefficient thing, you'll get a fraction of the energy back out from the hydrogen than it took to break it from the water. The water is not a fuel. Were getting power from a chemical reaction here. Once we burn the hydrogen - its combined back with oxygen and the same amount of water we started with comes out the tail pipe. So - the water is not fuel - its a source of hydrogen. once we use the hydrogen, we have the water back again. You could run an engine with a specific amount of water (youd have to collect the exhaust) - but you'd be dumping way more energy into splitting the water into hydrogen/oxygen than youll ever get back out of the motor.
"Not to be insulting, but would you reffer to rain as perpetaul motion? It falls, it rises, it falls, that is energy (movement) going both directions, up and down!"
Not perpetual motion. Its the result of the solar energy. (Wireless fusion power ;-) )
Once the sun burns up all its fuel (And it will...) the rain will stop.
"Of course you would need some way to evaporate the water to make it rise, so it is not perpetaul motion because you have extras to consider like heat from the sun."
Yes, exactly...
Hydrogen might make sense as a system of storing energy someday - its good that there is research going on. I think our govt would do better to start catching up on some other more useful things though - like wind power... fusion??? Solar?? - things that work now. It becomes practical I think when we have more power than we know what to do with and have to dump power somewhere! Then the inefficient process of making hydrogen might not matter so much - if we had lots of wind turbines and theyre making more power than we can use, why not!
One other important thing to consider with hydrogen that I dont think has been mentioned. The really effective way to make hydrogen is not electrolysis... it has to do with superheating water and then the hydrogen breaks off easily. The way they plan to do this is with Nuclear reactors (fission). Depending on how you feel about fission reactors... this is either a great thing (because they might make cheap clean power) or a horrible thing, because they leave us with very radioactive waste that nobody wants and we dont really know what to do with it... and, sometimes they melt down! But - the real plan of the "hydrogen economy" that our govt has proposed involves nuclear reactors. Its kind of efficient, because they not only make hydrogen, but all the heat can be reclaimed to run steam turbines and make electricity at the same time. I personally find it all a somewhat scary though. Good old lead acid batteries start looking pleasant by comparison. They havnt even figured out how to use or store the stuff yet! There is currently no way to put enough in a car to go very far.