Only if the marketplace demands it. Like everything else, "Supply and Demand."
Yes. Mass producing cars is not the problem. The fuel for fuel cells is too expensive, so far.
In 1896, 13 Dureyas cars were made in a factory in Springfield, Mass. These were the very first examples of mass-produced cars.
The energy produced by the fuel can be calculated using the energy equivalence of mass via the formula E=mc^2, where E is energy, m is mass, and c is the speed of light. Given that the mass of the water produced is 1.10 x 10^-11 kg, substituting this value into the formula will provide the energy produced from the fuel.
The first mass produced cars from an assembly line was the Curved Dash Oldsmobile. They were produced from 1901-1907. Henry Ford's Model T was introduced in 1908 for the 1909 model year.
well the cars he made were mass produced and at a affordable price for about any family.
saleen s7-rolls Royce
basal stem cells.
Mostly because the battery's are too heavy and hard to produce, then put into cars. Also, the battery doesn't stay fully charged for that long. There are a few mass-produced all electrics though, like the Tesla : )
Electric Ride On Cars were invented for the first time in 1842. They were produced in the late 19th and early 20th century but were not mass produced for the public until recently.
The first fully mass-produced cars are generally reckoned to be the Ford Models 'A' and 'T' , but it was by no means the first commercially-produced car. Nor were Ford cars the first mass-produced items: the principles were laid down in 19C defence manufacture but with an ancestry in 18C clock-making.
Mass Produced: 1/5th. Home-made: 1/1.
calorific value of fuel