Do not get them wet!
The turbine Indy car attempt threw gravel and other debris out of the exhaust behind it.I don’t know where those photographs came from, but I know that oil wells, pipelines, and refineries have been sabotaged in the past by native activists, unionists, climate activists, and wars.
Eliminating oil doesn’t make the world safer. It’s just going to make it a lot colder and slower until we figure things out. And what we’ve already figured out, back when I was a child, but never managed to deal with correctly, was nuclear energy production.
So the world doesn’t get safer, it gets more technical and dangerous. Everything else we’re doing right now takes more energy in than it gives back out, and operates at a loss to the world, in order to prototype some new power systems that are on the whole proving kind of dicey.
But until we started testing those windmills we didn’t know that they were gonna have a very short service life compared to their construction cost, and were going to be very expensive in terms of maintenance and the amount of property they occupied.
Now that we have built a whole lot of them, the engineers know a whole lot more, and so when politicians starting demanding impossible things, the engineers have some documentation to prove their experience.
Each new technology goes through this teething phase. Early gasoline cars would be considered total death traps nowadays. There was a lot of engineering that went on to get the gas tank out of your face and under the backseat.
It’s never easy to tickle the tail of the dragon. It doesn’t matter which dragon it is. I remember when they wanted to put atomic reactors inside of cars.
Nobody could figure out how to keep people from opening up a sealed atomic reactor. Or stealing it.
Those terrorists wouldn’t have gone after Marty and Doc Brown. They could’ve picked up some platonium at any Chevy dealer.
Remember the Chrysler turbine car? Probably not. That was back in like 1961. They put jet turbines in passenger cars and sent them out for testing. The darn things always sounded like jet engines going down the road, so you can imagine how loud the world would be if everybody drove a turbine car. The other thing was that the exhaust was hot enough to melt the plastic off your bumper if you got in back of one.
Those are things we wanted to do, because they would’ve been very efficient in terms of energy. But engineering could not solve the practical problems of their existence.
In each case we have to look to better engineering, and security, because we just can’t throw away the baby with the bathwater.
Resources are too hard to come by. People are too hungry.
This is a delicate topic, unfortunately drained with politics, especially at this moment. I am not going into politics about it.I don’t know where those photographs came from, but I know that oil wells, pipelines, and refineries have been sabotaged in the past by native activists, unionists, climate activists, and wars.
Eliminating oil doesn’t make the world safer. It’s just going to make it a lot colder and slower until we figure things out. And what we’ve already figured out, back when I was a child, but never managed to deal with correctly, was nuclear energy production.
So the world doesn’t get safer, it gets more technical and dangerous. Everything else we’re doing right now takes more energy in than it gives back out, and operates at a loss to the world, in order to prototype some new power systems that are on the whole proving kind of dicey.
But until we started testing those windmills we didn’t know that they were gonna have a very short service life compared to their construction cost, and were going to be very expensive in terms of maintenance and the amount of property they occupied.
Now that we have built a whole lot of them, the engineers know a whole lot more, and so when politicians starting demanding impossible things, the engineers have some documentation to prove their experience.
Each new technology goes through this teething phase. Early gasoline cars would be considered total death traps nowadays. There was a lot of engineering that went on to get the gas tank out of your face and under the backseat.
It’s never easy to tickle the tail of the dragon. It doesn’t matter which dragon it is. I remember when they wanted to put atomic reactors inside of cars.
Nobody could figure out how to keep people from opening up a sealed atomic reactor. Or stealing it.
Those terrorists wouldn’t have gone after Marty and Doc Brown. They could’ve picked up some platonium at any Chevy dealer.
Remember the Chrysler turbine car? Probably not. That was back in like 1961. They put jet turbines in passenger cars and sent them out for testing. The darn things always sounded like jet engines going down the road, so you can imagine how loud the world would be if everybody drove a turbine car. The other thing was that the exhaust was hot enough to melt the plastic off your bumper if you got in back of one.
Those are things we wanted to do, because they would’ve been very efficient in terms of energy. But engineering could not solve the practical problems of their existence.
In each case we have to look to better engineering, and security, because we just can’t throw away the baby with the bathwater.
Resources are too hard to come by. People are too hungry.
I do wonder about this sometimes. I think it depends on which field and with which motivation.Science and engineering should proceed with all due speed, but we must never forget our place in the scale of things.
This is a delicate topic, unfortunately drained with politics, especially at this moment. I am not going into politics about it.
We use hydrogen fuel cells to power all the heavy lifting equipment at the warehouse. I could lift a car and put it on the roof with my truck. The exhaust is pure clean water.I think they’ve been trying to build a practical fuel cell for every day use in vehicles but it’s proving way too expensive to make one which provides the necessary power. Plus they tend to produce a lot of gases that we don’t want to deal with.
Toyota’s been talking about hydrogen fuel cells for a long time now. Good luck getting them certified in the state of California without paying $1 billion.We use hydrogen fuel cells to power all the heavy lifting equipment at the warehouse. I could lift a car and put it on the roof with my truck. The exhaust is pure clean water.
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