JoeTheJuggler
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Jun 7, 2006
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In a recent CNN article about higher efficiency automotive technology http://tinyurl.com/29snl5 was the following:
Am I missing something, or shouldn't a system that uses compressed nitrogen gas be called pneumatic rather than hydraulic?
The EPA has built a modified hybrid that uses a hydraulic system, not a battery, to store braking energy. When you press the brakes, the wheels drive a pump that compresses nitrogen gas, which is inexpensive and inert. When you accelerate again, that compressed gas runs the pump in reverse to help power the vehicle.
The hydraulic-hybrid system, scheduled to begin testing in two UPS trucks this month, with another to follow next year, promises to return at least 70 percent of the braking energy back to the wheels, which would lead to a 60 to 70 percent jump in fuel economy and a 40 percent reduction in emissions.
Perhaps that's why Charles Gray, the director of the Advanced Technology Division and one of the developers of the hydraulic hybrid, can't contain his excitement about its potential.
"This is going to be the biggest revolution in automotive history," he declares. "Bigger than the assembly line."
That's yet to be seen, of course, but the hydraulic hybrid is also smaller and cheaper than conventional hybrids.
Am I missing something, or shouldn't a system that uses compressed nitrogen gas be called pneumatic rather than hydraulic?