Ian Wright joined CarBuzz as an automotive journalist and photographer in 2018. His career started with specialist publications, covering everything from Harley-Davidson to Ferrari. Before writing for ...
Hydrogen is projected to account for 16% of road transport, potentially competing with battery-powered electric vehicles. Challenges in hydrogen production efficiency and sourcing remain, with ...
The collaboration between Honda and GM to develop hydrogen cars, Toyota’s ongoing support for hydrogen technology, and the potential for retrofitting traditional gas engines to run on hydrogen might ...
Hydrogen-powered cars, also known as fuel cell electric vehicles (FCEVs), represent a promising alternative to traditional gasoline and electric vehicles . These cars use hydrogen as a fuel to produce ...
BMW will launch its first production hydrogen-powered Fuel Cell EV in 2028 It remains bullish on the prospect of hydrogen despite a crumbling infrastructure in the U.S. Toyota, Honda, and Hyundai have ...
Despite the obvious benefits of electric cars, Toyota spent the last decade insisting hydrogen would win out in the end. But, as the company announces its third generation fuel cell system, you can ...
Way back in 1807, Francois Isaac de Rivaz used a hydrogen-filled ballon to drive an engine he developed to propel an experimental vehicle — more than 50 years before the first gasoline-powered engine ...
Writer and occasional reluctant perpetrator of engine swaps, James O'Neil is a malaise era enthusiast and also fascinated by the many ways the auto industry has since recovered from those dark days.
I'm not sure how many of you know this, but among the many areas of interest for Japanese company Yamaha golf cars occupy a very special place. That's right, these guys don't only make motorcycles and ...
Writer and occasional reluctant perpetrator of engine swaps, James O'Neil is a malaise era enthusiast and also fascinated by the many ways the auto industry has since recovered from those dark days.
The hydrogen car may have legions of fervent fans, but Energy Secretary Steven Chu apparently is not among them. Earlier this year, the Nobel Prize-winning scientist essentially zeroed government ...