The Unfortunate Truth About Toyota’s Hydrogen V8 Engine

Can Toyota’s Hydrogen V8 Save Combustion Engines? How Toyota’s Hydrogen Engine Works - Subscribe to Engineering Explained for more videos! - Toyota partnered with Yamaha to develop a hydrogen powered V8 engine, derived from the V8 used on the Lexus RC F. The engine produces 450 horsepower by burning hydrogen, and thus has no direct carbon emissions. Unfortunately, there’s a big problem with hydrogen combustion vehicles, as this video will demonstrate. From the Yamaha Press Release: “In November last year, the five companies of Kawasaki Heavy Industries, Subaru Corporation, Toyota Motor Corporation, Mazda Motor Corporation, and Yamaha Motor jointly announced they would begin discussions for conducting collaborative research into possible avenues for expanding the range of fuel options for internal combustion engines in the quest for carbon neutrality. And at the announcement venue, the V8 hydrogen engine shown above, which was developed by Yamaha for Toyota, was unveiled to the public. The unit is based on the engine in the Lexus RC F luxury sport coupe, with modifications made to the injectors, cylinder heads, intake manifold, and more, and delivers up to 450 hp at 6,800 rpm and a maximum 540 Nm of torque of at 3,600 rpm.“ References: Yamaha - #/ Hydrogen Storage - Toyota Mirai - Hydrogen Combustion Review - Hydrogen Combustion Eff. - #:~:text=Using hydrogen in internal combustion,fossil-fueled internal combustion engines. AFDC Fuel Properties - Hydrogen Prices - BMW Hydrogen 7 Road Test - DOE Hydrogen - Hydrogen Storage - Recommended Books & Car Products - EE Shirts! - Engineering Explained is a participant in the Amazon Influencer Program. Don’t forget to check out my other pages below! Instagram: Facebook: Twitter: EE Extra:
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