Note that all the miles were in California. That is because a hydrogen vehicle can't leave the state.
There are only 29 hydrogen fueling stations in the U.S. in 4 states. 1 each in South Carolina, Connecticut, Massachusetts, and the remaining 26 in California. See: http://www.afdc.energy.gov/fuels/hydrogen_locations.html Mike On September 26, 2016 5:20:01 PM MDT, via EV <[email protected]> wrote: >I don’t see how this is an EV. It is a H2 car, not an EV. If it is an >EV then so are all the trains that haul things around the country. They >are moved entirely by electric motors, just like the H2 Toyota. The >only difference is the Toyota takes compressed H2 where as the trains >take diesel. Take out the plug on a BMW i3 and only fuel it with >gasoline. Would it still be classed as an EV? > >Sent from my Windows 10 phone > >From: Cor van de Water via EV >-------------- next part -------------- >An HTML attachment was scrubbed... >URL: ><http://lists.evdl.org/private.cgi/ev-evdl.org/attachments/20160926/e6de6e9d/attachment.htm> >_______________________________________________ >UNSUBSCRIBE: http://www.evdl.org/help/index.html#usub >http://lists.evdl.org/listinfo.cgi/ev-evdl.org >Read EVAngel's EV News at http://evdl.org/evln/ >Please discuss EV drag racing at NEDRA >(http://groups.yahoo.com/group/NEDRA) _______________________________________________ UNSUBSCRIBE: http://www.evdl.org/help/index.html#usub http://lists.evdl.org/listinfo.cgi/ev-evdl.org Read EVAngel's EV News at http://evdl.org/evln/ Please discuss EV drag racing at NEDRA (http://groups.yahoo.com/group/NEDRA)
