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| # | Post Title | Result Info | Date | User | Forum |
| Answer to: toyota developing ammonia engines | 54Relevance | 2 years ago | Justin Shepherd | Submit Your Question HERE | |
| It will never be used in everyday engines. I used to work as a solution control technician and I would lift 250 gallon, 50% ammonia totes into position to be gravity fed into various tanks. It takes your breath away if you happen to encounter it, and it's very toxic. You must wear the proper PPE, including a respirator. I have HAZWOPPER certification. Gasoline or diesel is a little more mundane, you can easily soak up diesel or gasoline single special mats with little effects. ammonia is another story, especially if it's concentrated. | |||||
| Answer to: Ammonia as a liquid motor fuel. | 54Relevance | 3 years ago | Justin Shepherd | Submit Your Question HERE | |
| Your idea simply won't work. You have to put a respirator on when you're working with ammonia. It is VERY toxic to humans. It takes your breath away, literally. I used to titrate for ammonia, via electroless nickel solutions. Everyone would have to undergo basic Hazmat training in order to drive a car. That's not practical, even if you somehow managed to solve everything else. | |||||
| Answer to: Ammonia as a liquid motor fuel. | 54Relevance | 3 years ago | MountainManJoe | Submit Your Question HERE | |
| Hmm sounds like fuel storage would be an issue. ammonia has at least 4 times less energy than gasoline, so you would need to store a lot of it for any decent range. It would have to be compressed into cylinders which are bulky, and can explode when heated. They would have to be refilled slowly under high pressure. ammonia is extremely corrosive. It'll destroy a normal combustion engine very quickly. Not to mention that it's extremely harmful to humans. Contact or inhalation causes instant burns. This does not sound very practical at all. | |||||
| Ammonia as a liquid motor fuel. | 54Relevance | 3 years ago | Magic Dragon | Submit Your Question HERE | |
| Have land; cleared site; have 300 solar panels for power; have a fire truck as a test engine. …. All self financed and accumulated. Work on this project winters in the Caribbean. Can you recommend an lpg conversion kit that I can adapt to run on ammonia. This has the potential of being a cheap substitute motor fuel that can be manufactured almost anywhere. The cost of the ongoing inputs are minuscule… the cost is in the equipment to manufacture not so cheap. Paradigm Shift….???? Non petroleum based motor fuel one can produce and store. Forget el ... | |||||
| Answer to: News | 53Relevance | 2 years ago | DereksWebsitesAndMore | Submit Your Question HERE | |
| Scotty, what do you think of Toyota's new ammonia-powered engine? Here's the article: | |||||
| Answer to: toyota developing ammonia engines | 36Relevance | 2 years ago | MountainManJoe | Submit Your Question HERE | |
| yeah it's an old topic How to search | |||||
| Answer to: toyota developing ammonia engines | 36Relevance | 2 years ago | Hixster | Submit Your Question HERE | |
| @justin-shepherd There's also a lack of infrastructure to delivery that ammonia into the cars (here we go again). | |||||
| toyota developing ammonia engines | 36Relevance | 2 years ago | migs41 | Submit Your Question HERE | |
| Scotty, Have you heard about Toyota developing a new engine that runs on ammonia? Very interesting and game changing for the auto world. | |||||
| Answer to: What does Scotty think of Toyota's new ammonia engine? | 36Relevance | 2 years ago | scottykilmer | Submit Your Question HERE | |
| Well it's fascinating technology but of course there is no ammonia fuel supply as it stands today | |||||
| What does Scotty think of Toyota's new ammonia engine? | 36Relevance | 2 years ago | Sigman Floyd | Submit Your Question HERE | |
| What does Scotty think of Toyota's new ammonia engine? | |||||
| Exhaust Smelling like ammonia in 2006 Honda Pilot | 36Relevance | 5 years ago | masif | Submit Your Question HERE | |
| I have a Honda Pilot 2006. For a while, the exhaust has been giving off this smell (kind of like ammonia). It only happens after a cold start and disappears after couple of minutes. I want to know if it’s something serious. Thank you for your time. | |||||
| hydrogen/ammonia system | 36Relevance | 5 years ago | steveg | Submit Your Question HERE | |
| Hi scotty I just watched a video about a fellow that put a 12 volt dry cell battery which creates hydrogen then somehow mixes with ammonia then the vacuum from the air cleaner sucks the mixture into the intake and years about 8 mpg on his 99 dodge ram. Have you heard of this? | |||||
| Answer to: Ammonia as a liquid motor fuel. | 19Relevance | 3 years ago | Chuck Tobias | Submit Your Question HERE | |
| Whatever the merits or demerits of this might be, the problem is that the psychos running the world world leaders have made the decision that battery electric is what they want and they have already forcibly imposed that mandate on manufacturers who have had to make massive investments in that technology. Whether we like it or not, that's the reality. So anything else is going to be an uphill battle whether it is better or not. You might want to try contacting Scotty directly for his take on it. Instructions are in the FAQ. | |||||
| RE: Exhaust Smelling like ammonia in 2006 Honda Pilot | 19Relevance | 5 years ago | InThrustWeTrust | Submit Your Question HERE | |
| Unless some sick person is playing a prank on you, try buying fuel from a different brand for a few weeks & check if the smell still persists. | |||||
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