As far as the actual relative advantages of one fuel over the other, I have no opinions set in stone.MikeB wrote: ↑Tue Mar 02, 2021 5:11 am @Tom - I'm not intending to discourage research into Hydrogen (or any research at all!), rather I am trying to encourage research into other options. For me, both methane and methanol are "clean enough" when burned, though methanol also seems to be usable in fuel-cells, where again it appears to be 'better all-round' than Hydrogen, and many other fuels.
Part of the point of forums like this is to save people the effort of repeating other people's 'mistakes' (I use the term loosely), so I take no offence if your opinion still differs from mine!
As much as I might squint and strain to see, however, I can hardly view calling something "junk" encouraging, or anywhere approaching neutral or unbiased.
On a broader front, in terms of the course of history and the future of life on planet earth, I wonder, what is the advantage of a fuel that requires mining coal or cutting down trees over something that can be obtained, literally, from thin air.
Of course, hydrogen can be gotten from coal as well.
And maybe Methanol can be manufactured out of thin air:
https://www.thedrive.com/news/38707/sci ... f-thin-air
I'm involved in an art guild here. Art criticism is something I've participated in on a fairly regular basis. An artists hangs up his work and a group of people pick it apart, say what they like or don't like. Artists, as a whole, being rather sensitive, in general, words of advice are weighed carefully.
I don't think anyone would think of making some blanket assertion in regard to someone's work "modern (or whatever) art is JUNK, you should focus on the classics (or whatever), don't make that mistake".
I suppose it could be argued that such a statement would not be discouraging, but rather encouragement to pursue a different course, though that leaves me to wonder what may be lost , what might have been?
The old butterfly effect. Instead of producing art to inspire future generations, this soul may instead, give up altogether. But it could go either way I suppose.
I'm also a Tesla fan (Nicola that is, not the car). I do believe, mistakenly or not, that at least one of his neglected inventions could have changed the course of history for the better.