OK I have a Invention that will BEAT all those Hydrogen Generator cars, it is called the AIR Car, already in Production and can get as much as 2,000 Miles on just one Full Tank full of Air Pressure with very little Gas.

OK... Now I've had time to finish laughing my ass off and think about it, a pneumatic car actually makes sense, assuming you can store enough compressed air to travel a reasonable distance.
(I must admit, those are three big-ass air cylinders for a lightweight car, and 300 Bar is a hell of a lot of pressure.)
There are a few things which make the video seem a little less credible.
First of all is your claim that it "can get as much as 2,000 Miles on just one Full Tank full of Air Pressure", which is clearly bull****. The video mentions 200km (about 140 miles) on a full tank of air which is far more plausible.
(You're probably meant the air/petrol hybrid... but there's no mention of exactly how much fuel would be required to make the distance.)
For the claims made by the video itself...
The next thing which makes this less credible is the claim that you could fill it up from the air compressor at a service station. Earlier he states that the cylinders hold 300 bar... and then mentions that this is 150 times the pressure you pump your tires to, so he clearly means bar, not psi.
What kind of service station has a compressor that goes up to 300 bar? That's 4350 psi! That's insane. You might get 300 psi from a service station, but not 300 bar.
Another thing which makes this less credible is the claim that you can fill it up at home with an air compressor for just a couple of dollars a tank.
Let's do a little math. They're light weight cars, so let's assume it can go 100km/h on 20hp. That's 15kw. The video says one tank-full gets 200km, so that comes to 30kw/hours per tank-full. Assuming the car and compressor are each only 50% efficient, thats 120 kw/hours of electricity. I'm currently paying $0.15 per kw/hour, so that comes to $18 per tank. That's a lot more than "a couple of dollars" per tank, but I admit it's still pretty cheap.
ETA: I'm not saying the compressed-air car is woo or bunk, just that getting your info from a You-Tube clip of a TV program isn't particularly reliable. I do look forward to seeing more development in this area.