The world of Fallout takes another eerie step closer
The world of Fallout takes another eerie step closer
<strong>[ -> N/A]</strong>
Time to sell your crappy two-door Honda's and jump aboard the Fallout-train! Next stop - the Highwayman, baby!<blockquote><em>Before the year is over, someone somewhere in California will be driving a vehicle powered by hydrogen. <br><br>That was the forecast delivered by Honda on Wednesday, when it announced that the state and federal governments had certified its new fuel cell cars.</em></blockquote>First there's the US army's plan for power armor... then there's giant chunks of rock hurtling towards the earth... and now fuel cells for cars! Here's a wee bit more to get you interested:<blockquote><em>Fuel-cell vehicles are an improvement over electric cars, because their power supply can be taken on board, and they are cleaner than hybrid cars, which use both electric and internal combustion engines. <br><br>The downsides are their cost, which are thousands of dollars higher than standard autos, and the difficulty in developing a wide array of hydrogen pumping stations.
</em></blockquote>OK... so they're not <!-- BBCode Start --><B>fusion cells</B><!-- BBCode End --> (thanks Saint)... but c'mon. Do the creators of Fallout subscribe to the same newsletter Nostradamus did? I don't know... but these coincidences are beginning to get a little too creepy. All I can say is I hope your backyard vault is at least 10% finished. Read more about your post-apocalyptic mode of transportation <a href="http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f ... N13709.DTL" target="_blank">here.</a> Cheers IKnowWangFu!
Time to sell your crappy two-door Honda's and jump aboard the Fallout-train! Next stop - the Highwayman, baby!<blockquote><em>Before the year is over, someone somewhere in California will be driving a vehicle powered by hydrogen. <br><br>That was the forecast delivered by Honda on Wednesday, when it announced that the state and federal governments had certified its new fuel cell cars.</em></blockquote>First there's the US army's plan for power armor... then there's giant chunks of rock hurtling towards the earth... and now fuel cells for cars! Here's a wee bit more to get you interested:<blockquote><em>Fuel-cell vehicles are an improvement over electric cars, because their power supply can be taken on board, and they are cleaner than hybrid cars, which use both electric and internal combustion engines. <br><br>The downsides are their cost, which are thousands of dollars higher than standard autos, and the difficulty in developing a wide array of hydrogen pumping stations.
</em></blockquote>OK... so they're not <!-- BBCode Start --><B>fusion cells</B><!-- BBCode End --> (thanks Saint)... but c'mon. Do the creators of Fallout subscribe to the same newsletter Nostradamus did? I don't know... but these coincidences are beginning to get a little too creepy. All I can say is I hope your backyard vault is at least 10% finished. Read more about your post-apocalyptic mode of transportation <a href="http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f ... N13709.DTL" target="_blank">here.</a> Cheers IKnowWangFu!
Last edited by Kreegle on Fri Jul 26, 2002 11:37 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- Saint_Proverbius
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Fuel cells have nothing to do with Fallout, Kreegie-poo.
From: http://www.fuelcells.org/whatis.htm
Grrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr!
From: http://www.fuelcells.org/whatis.htm
Notice that they take hydrocarbon based fuels, i.e. petroleum, natural gas, and so on, to work. Those things were depleted before the Great War, which is why FUSION CELLS were used.Hydrogen fuel is fed into the "anode" of the fuel cell. Oxygen (or air) enters the fuel cell through the cathode. Encouraged by a catalyst, the hydrogen atom splits into a proton and an electron, which take different paths to the cathode. The proton passes through the electrolyte. The electrons create a separate current that can be utilized before they return to the cathode, to be reunited with the hydrogen and oxygen in a molecule of water.
A fuel cell system which includes a "fuel reformer" can utilize the hydrogen from any hydrocarbon fuel - from natural gas to methanol, and even gasoline. Since the fuel cell relies on chemistry and not combustion, emissions from this type of a system would still be much smaller than emissions from the cleanest fuel combustion processes.
Grrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr!
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- Saint_Proverbius
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DARPA has had "Project Exoskeleton" around for a while now.The_one-1 wrote:I didn't hear that the gov. is planning on making Power Armour, where did you hear that from?
http://darpa.mil
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Fuel cells, fusion cells, who cares? The "fusion cell" is an entirely fabricated idea -- if you're using fusion in a battery, it's technically not a cell -- so there's no real point in nit-picking here. It's also important to note that the fuel cell stands as a "futuristic" power source, if only because their chief usage is in spacecraft.
As for the exoskeleton... coupled with the gun they're developing whose bullets can turn corners, things are getting QUITE scary.
As for the exoskeleton... coupled with the gun they're developing whose bullets can turn corners, things are getting QUITE scary.