From where does the energy needed to compress the air come?
All the usual sources, I would assume. They've had compressors at gas stations all my life. People have compressors at home and at some job sites. I don't know if you would need a special kind or size.
It just seems that if you can plug in a Nissan Leaf to an outlet in your garage, it would be almost as easy to use a compressor to fill a tank in this kind of car, and eliminate the gross ecological damage of nickel production for car batteries like the one the Prius uses:
Prius has larger ecological footprint than a Hummer The linked article was from Jan. 2005, when gas was about $2.50/gallon. It said the car would run 62 miles on $1 worth of air. My cost then was about $0.08/kwh, and if we said that was average in the U.S. (but maybe not), it would take about 12.5 kwh of power to fill the tank.
I pay about $0.10 per kwh now, so that might be about $1.25 per 62 miles. If I had a car that got 31 mpg, that 62 miles would cost me $7.50 at WA's gas prices today ($3.75/gal).
One tank of gas (12 gallons) would get me about 375 miles and cost almost $45.
If the MiniCat did what it says, the same 375 miles would cost me $7.50 in electricity.
Extrapolating that to 100,000 miles (assuming you didn't get flattened by a 17yo texting while driving his 3.5-ton pickup):
100,000÷375 mpg = 267 tanks of gas @ $45 =
$12,015100,000÷1613 tanks of air @ $1.25 =
$2,016Add to that last line a $2,000 compressor and you would still be far ahead of a smaller Chevy using gas.
Of course, that's if my math is correct, which is no sure thing.
But if they really do exist and work, where are they? Who is making them? Or are they just pie in the sky?
Sue