It's is put into a regular gas tank. Since hydrogen's state of matter is gas it is kept at a high pressure in the car. Therefore it's hard to get good mpg because you can't fit as much in a normal sized tank.
To use less oil
Generally, a Hydrogen powered car runs by using hydrogen and oxygen to create electricity in a fuel cell, which is then used to power an electric traction motor that runs the car. Direct ignition-engines are more difficult and dangerous to 'run'.
Hydrogen energy can be stored in various ways, including compressed gas tanks, liquid hydrogen tanks, and solid-state storage materials. These storage methods allow hydrogen to be used as a fuel for various applications, such as in fuel cells for generating electricity or in hydrogen-powered vehicles.
read a book fool
Depends on your definition of "car" The first self-propelled vehicle was in 1769-- steam engine. The first internal combustion powered car was 1807..Hydrogen powered. The first gasoline IC car was 1886. First electric 1900. Seems we have come full-circle, the next reliable, available fuel will be hydrogen.
It either has solar energy stored in a battery or it doesn't move.
in a episode of top gear James drove a car that was powered by hydrogen so you can use it for the car he drive which was a type of Honda
it depend on what is your stand point. if you are upper class , hydrogen is the solution, anything lower, hybrid. Hydrogens cost anywhere from $60,000 to $1,000,000, depending on the car.
If it is water-fueled, it is most likely Hydrogen powered. In essences, this means that the only thing coming out of the exhaust pipe is water. A perpetually powered Hydrogen vehicle.... now, that's the way to go!
You could build one today. I also hear that at least one Hydrogen powered car reached the US Market. Check with a Honda dealer or any dealer to see if there are any models available.
There is currently no practical hydrogen powered car. Anything you found advertised on Ebay should be looked at with extreme schepticism. In all likelihood it would not be practical for you to attempt to use
There are a couple ways you could run a car on hydrogen. First is to just burn the hydrogen, but you would need a LOT of hydrogen to power a car--about 2 cubic feet of it at 3000 psi (which is the pressure in a tank from a welding shop) per each gallon of gasoline you don't want to use. The other is to make an electric car with a hydrogen-powered fuel cell.