Toyota testing race car hydrogen combustion engines
The automaker is testing H2 in race cars as an important step toward using this tech commercially. Earlier this week, Toyota (TYO stock symbol 7203) announced that it is testing hydrogen combustion engines in race cars as a part of its effort to bring the technology closer to commercial products. The new design will burn through H2 instead of using gasoline, somewhat like the way rockets work. The automaker from Japan released a statement explaining that it was testing the hydrogen combustion engines in race cars to make it possible to collect data and conduct on-site repairs for issues as t…
The automaker is testing H2 in race cars as an important step toward using this tech commercially.
Earlier this week, Toyota (TYO stock symbol 7203) announced that it is testing hydrogen combustion engines in race cars as a part of its effort to bring the technology closer to commercial products.The new design will burn through H2 instead of using gasoline, somewhat like the way rockets work.
The automaker from Japan released a statement explaining that it was testing the hydrogen combustion engines in race cars to make it possible to collect data and conduct on-site repairs for issues as they occur. Toyota had already announced that it was working on this type of engine, a technology that other automakers such as Ford Motor Co have already developed. Vehicles powered in this way differ from fuel cell vehicles, despite the fact that H2 is used in both cases. Fuel cell vehicles use the H2 to create electricity which then powers battery electric or hybrid vehicles. However, in the technology being tested by Toyota, it is burned in a way comparable to the way rockets are fueled.