"I first heard of the air powered car about a year ago. I think that it was first developed in France. I'm not sure just how the power cycle on the engine works, but I know there are working vehicles using this technology and the power source is very high pressure air.
You're pretty much looking at a steam engine powered with compressed air instead of steam pressure.
"The actual range between refuels will depend on the air tank size, air pressure, vehicle weight, accelerations, driving terrain and driving speeds, etc.
From what I remember, the vehicle is very light weight and will probably have trouble getting approved here in the US, at least with regards to freeway driving and I doubt that it will have many luxuries (limited power and torque).
Accurate. Also, there's a pretty good writeup on it in Wikipedia.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Compressed-air_vehicle"If an owner invests in a commercial air compressor, you could drive one of the cars around town for virtually free. For non freeway driving and two passenger use, I think this technology will blow the socks off of the 'mini/small' electric car market and maybe even put a dent in the mid sized electric vehicles.
Whole clothe, marketing hype, and natural fertilizer. Commercial air compressors only generate arounf 0.1 KSI (100 PSI). The car requires an air compressor that can handle up to 4.5 KSI. For that you need a high pressure air compressors, and they typically run $10,000-$20,000. Add to that the loss of efficiency during compression, and loss of heat from the tank, and you're far from "virtually free".
"So, to answer your question, yes this technology exists. Whether it becomes commercially viable remains to be seen, but I suspect that there is a market and we will be seeing air powered cars in the near future."
It's been proven in small scale (RC plane engines, etc.), but the physics of scale, and the accident hazards are going to make this a curiosity. But, not a mainstream solution.
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P.S. From my perspective the overriding problems are efficiency followed by infrastructure. The most promising technologies within the foreseeable future will be a combination of alternate fuels (including electricity), hybridization, and cascading power cycles using waste heat (e.g. radiator and exhaust losses).