JCB is moving to hydrogen power for all their big machinery. Here’s why.

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  • čas přidán 4. 03. 2023
  • JCB are developing new hydrogen powered engines for their bigger machines that work long hours. I visit JCB to find out why Lord Bamford is backing hydrogen as the fuel of the future for heavy machinery, including agricultural equipment and HGVs.

Komentáře • 1,8K

  • @georgespruce6028
    @georgespruce6028 Před rokem +18

    Has a school boy i did a project about farm machine,s and JCB sent more items and info than any other company and i have always remembered that with GREAT RESPECT and admiration for JCB.

  • @ashleyobrien4937
    @ashleyobrien4937 Před rokem +13

    3:30 Very interesting comment there by Lord Bamford stating that owners would be able to work on repairing the engines just like shop mechanics can, I find that very positive in light of how companies like John Deer go all out to prevent owners from even touching the motor etc.

  • @honorkemp
    @honorkemp Před rokem +156

    Great to know we still have some amazing talent and brilliant industry still here in England .Thank you Lord Bamford

    • @JM-yx1lm
      @JM-yx1lm Před rokem

      You have 1 place left.

    • @wyattfamily8997
      @wyattfamily8997 Před rokem +4

      Hope they have security to protect their technology from China.

    • @piccalillipit9211
      @piccalillipit9211 Před 9 měsíci +1

      YEP - this is what the UK should be doing - leading the way on the tech the world needs for the next 50 years. Not giving out oil and gas licences and hanging onto 100 year old technology

    • @mybigfatfrog7975
      @mybigfatfrog7975 Před 6 měsíci +1

      @@wyattfamily8997 Toyota is way ahead in the game they are even going for ammonia combustion engines for ships.

    • @MrRaybrown007
      @MrRaybrown007 Před 2 měsíci

      ​@@wyattfamily8997 if they wanted to save the planet shouldn't they be giving the knowledge away. Global warming is a scam.

  • @ykdickybill
    @ykdickybill Před 10 měsíci +35

    🇬🇧As an Englishman, I am so proud of all of you at JCB ! Well done everyone from a humble Yorkshire Electrician 👍

    • @jamieford9391
      @jamieford9391 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Yes Brexit has been a fantastic uplift to the sector🇬🇧

    • @harryarmstrong9201
      @harryarmstrong9201 Před 6 dny

      As a Scot 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿I am very proud of the British company 🇬🇧JCB racing ahead with the development of Hydrogen engines. Good job we have loads of windfarms and lots of water in Scotland,to create loads of green hydrogen,for British construction equipment!!😀

  • @jcfallows
    @jcfallows Před rokem +16

    Dear Harry please investigate hydrogen production, transportation and storage at the filling stations of the hydrogen. That will be an eye opener!

    • @rogerphelps9939
      @rogerphelps9939 Před 3 měsíci +5

      Yes. It will demonstrate very clearly why JCB is going up a blind alley and that they will be going the way of the dodo if they don not change.

    • @wahiba
      @wahiba Před 2 měsíci

      @@rogerphelps9939 Industrial hydrogen use is at 350 bar which makes it easier to work with than for cars where it is 700 bar plus and often liquid does not take up the same room as gas. JCB have obviously considered the supply side, which for industry is different to domestic. If you want a green fuel for your car get a diesel and use bio fuel (ie cooking oil)

    • @rogerphelps9939
      @rogerphelps9939 Před 2 měsíci

      Farmers won't like paying through the nose for this nonsense. Liquid H2 on a farm? No way. JCB are toast.@@wahiba

    • @wahiba
      @wahiba Před 2 měsíci

      Toasted in an hydrogen powered toaster? JCB provide mainly industrial plant and it seems to me they have included the Hydrogen supply chain in their calculations. Farmers being more intermittent in their use of power will no doubt use a mixture of electricity and hydrogen. We have been here before; horses to steam, steam to liquid fuel IC. The world did not end then, so why now?@@rogerphelps9939

  • @thomaswykes3647
    @thomaswykes3647 Před rokem +54

    I worked in the same design office as Ryan at Triumph Motorcycles 20+ years ago. I'm very impressed and humbled by how far he's come.

  • @gerdriechers8426
    @gerdriechers8426 Před rokem +5

    No talking - doing! Its good to see. Thank you JCB and Harry! Please keep on going.

  • @maxzunker4100
    @maxzunker4100 Před rokem +31

    Excellent video, I’ve wanted to know about hydrogen fueling for years now, I’m also a farmer and could just not see how I could operate on battery powered tractors, excavators, pumps ect. I’m impressed and now have a more positive outlook for the future of agriculture and pastural businesses, especially here in Queensland , Australia where we have huge tracts of land that need to worked efficiently to produce food for the world market. Go JCB.

    • @timothyterrell1658
      @timothyterrell1658 Před 8 měsíci

      Stay away from hydrogen fueled equipment. The hydrogen is the problem. You can never get around that it is hydrogen.
      Hydrogen is an explosive... If you don't understand,,put a match on a car battery with the cap off.🤨
      It only takes a tiny little bit.💥

    • @Hogger280
      @Hogger280 Před 3 měsíci +1

      Well, you won't operate any better on H2 than on battery; get your checkbook out because it's going to cost you a lot more to do the same work you did with diesel!!

    • @quadcoptervision
      @quadcoptervision Před 3 měsíci

      The aim of the banksters is to bankrupt the farmer corporates and seize the land and businesses... And frankly the farmers are playing into their hands as are the corporates......

    • @rogerphelps9939
      @rogerphelps9939 Před 3 měsíci

      you have a very limited imagination if you cannot see how you could operate on battery powered tractors etc. I can assure you that if you actually see a hydrogen powered tractor thew operating costs will shock you. Batteries are the way ahead.

  • @johnarnell4241
    @johnarnell4241 Před rokem +15

    Once it gets to one dollar a kilo,the govt will tax it up to five.

  • @gerry343
    @gerry343 Před rokem +260

    Thanks Harry, a really interesting video. Hats off to JCB for the progress they've made towards hydrogen powered heavy duty vehicles. Also, credit to the company for maintaining their factories in Britain as well as opening up abroad.

    • @lynjames4306
      @lynjames4306 Před rokem +9

      Excellent video, Hopefully the people who have not Managed to get it working are Watching this !!!!!, Brilliant Engineering form Jcb And the most comprehensive information so far with the Refuelling Shown, This is the most important game changer in modern history, Hopefully Jcb will work with the Australian mining company who have managed to use Diesel and Hydrogen in the combustion chamber with 85% Less Emissions, and Should be Able to be used as a After market Bolt on Kit ,Thanks Sir Anthony Bamford for placing British Products Again Ahead of the competition Amazing progress in a Few years Development, This Technology Should keep my 1963 Jcb 3c Running for the next 60 years 🤣👍

    • @highlandrab19
      @highlandrab19 Před rokem +5

      Give it a few years and theyll shut the uk ones they were never going to close one set and open new ones at the same time

    • @tikasonar8116
      @tikasonar8116 Před rokem

      ​@@lynjames4306 bond love ft tuj

    • @ghostrider7688
      @ghostrider7688 Před rokem +2

      @@highlandrab19 hope not mate

    • @robertdarby6553
      @robertdarby6553 Před rokem +6

      JCB worldwide manufacturing headquarters... India. Their direction of travel is obvious.

  • @chuckhenry5487
    @chuckhenry5487 Před rokem +3

    This should be mandatory to view by every politician in the world! Excellent thanks to you and JCB

    • @rogerphelps9939
      @rogerphelps9939 Před 3 měsíci

      Yes. It must be mandatory viewing to show politicians how old established companies stuck in the past are just going up a blind alley. JCB is screwed if they do not change course.

  • @Billydevito
    @Billydevito Před rokem +10

    11:50 Whilst there is no carbon in the fuel, all internal combustion engines consume a little engine oil during operation.
    It’s just the way the engine functions.
    I hope the redesign for hydrogen has incorporated some secret design elements that reduce the oil consumption to virtually zero.
    JCB is truly a legacy company that the British can be proud of.
    I wish them all the success 👍

    • @rogerphelps9939
      @rogerphelps9939 Před rokem

      It is legacy in the worst sense of the word.

    • @davidiscostarica6097
      @davidiscostarica6097 Před 3 měsíci

      They do make biodegradable motor oil, so once H2 motors are everywhere., the demange will increase.

    • @keithturner3580
      @keithturner3580 Před měsícem

      Modern engines burn very little of their lubrication oil even at 95000 miles I have yet to need to top up between services.

  • @gplusgplus2286
    @gplusgplus2286 Před rokem +396

    JCB is one of the few gems left in British industry.

  • @roba4297
    @roba4297 Před rokem +62

    Congratulations to JCB for grasping the nettle and developing a replacement engine, and thanks to yourself for producing this video. Excellent.

    • @fradaja
      @fradaja Před 9 měsíci +2

      It’ll be their downfall

    • @ClifftopTragedy
      @ClifftopTragedy Před 3 měsíci

      I hope it works. How much will it cost to keep full with hydrogen though? Petrol and diesel have had a century to mature. Other technologies won't be given as long before being ditched

  • @davidgrover2665
    @davidgrover2665 Před rokem +4

    Great video Harry - so good to see this great solution for these types of big heavy hardworking machines. Thank goodness JCB have poured money into this & developed it given the lack of interest & support from UK Gov.

  • @GypsyHunter232UK
    @GypsyHunter232UK Před 3 měsíci +3

    Richard Hammond has definitely changed the last time we saw him..Thanks Richard very much enjoyed your latest JCB Engine video

  • @Stu_2112
    @Stu_2112 Před rokem +39

    The future lies in a mix of technologies. No one technology or solution fits all applications.... automotive, agriculture, mass transit, aviation etc. This solution would appear to suit the agriculture application well (unlike battery electric) but the main issue is that you don't just dig a hole in the ground and suck up hydrogen, it's massively energy intensive to produce. So the environmental credentials of each technology/solution is still a challenging problem, just like other technologies. Very interesting though.

    • @rogerphelps9939
      @rogerphelps9939 Před rokem +5

      Who says that hydrogen ICEs are superior to battery electric? The hydrogen infrastructure is not there and they can't even make it work for cars plus the fact that running costs are very high. Just about every farm is connected to the electricity grid and tractors are very rarely in use all night. JCB are backing the wrong horse.

    • @nephos100
      @nephos100 Před rokem +1

      @@rogerphelps9939 Hi Roger. If it can work for large formerly diesel machinery, how come it won't work for cars? I've talked to mechanics who have converted their petrol cars to hydrogen as a hobby project and with an onboard water electrolysis unit! The car made its own hydrogen and powered the car no problem.

    • @callumcurtis15
      @callumcurtis15 Před 5 měsíci +3

      @@nephos100 🤣🤣🤣 they got you good .

    • @nephos100
      @nephos100 Před 5 měsíci

      @@callumcurtis15 Good one, Callam. Next time provide an argument. Otherwise, just let the adults talk.

    • @nicholaspostlethwaite9554
      @nicholaspostlethwaite9554 Před 3 měsíci

      @@nephos100 It is not that hydrogen 'can not work', but it is not any good, practical. There were hydrogen filling stations set up in several countries including the UK by Shell, they have closed them, another country recently. The only hydrogen that would or will be acceptable is that made from electricity, cleanly. It delivers about a third of the power needed to create it.
      4th largest iron ore producer Fortescue tried out big equipment in both Hydrogen and electric power versions and have dumped hydrogen as electric was so much better.
      czcams.com/video/j7n7qk3NY0k/video.html covered at about 2;30 in on that.

  • @herbierossiter9354
    @herbierossiter9354 Před rokem +94

    Well done JCB, and not just some CEO, but the boss himself, that to me says a great deal, he's delighted to show what his team have done, congratulations JCB.
    Harry as a farmer's son, and an estate manager, I wondered how we would get the grass cut, battery power is just to heavy, I like this system.
    Thank you for taking the time to show us our future

  • @greencandletraction
    @greencandletraction Před rokem +8

    Harry thank you this was fascinating and enlightening. Coming from the haulage background I have long had an inkling that flogging away at batteries for our needs just won't do it for a vast spread of road haulage operations. So I am surprised the major truck manufacturers have not started this push towards Internal Combustion Hydrogen. I think Hydrogen makes people think of fuel cells and thus it becomes very misunderstood. JCB make what they have gone for look easy! Interesting times ahead, keep up the great work on documenting this stuff

  • @nickl74
    @nickl74 Před rokem +1

    For Africa this is a game changer. JCB through their Raze H2 business (Jo Bamford's business) have a deal with an Aussie firm, Fortescue to establish a supply of friendly Hydrogen (as green as possible). With renewable energy costs falling daily means the costs of H2 production is falling rapidly.

  • @Banditmanuk
    @Banditmanuk Před rokem +40

    Thank you so much for showing us this. Great to see some companies going down this route, electricity & battery technology isn't the answer to everything. I hope JCB prosper developing this tech.

    • @rogerphelps9939
      @rogerphelps9939 Před 3 měsíci +1

      Hydrogen is not the solution for powering agricultural machinery.

    • @Banditmanuk
      @Banditmanuk Před 3 měsíci

      @rogerphelps9939 I guess you will always find haters of hydrogen tech as you will with electric. As a former farmer, I find the diesel engine very hard to beat. Hydrogen has to be seriously considered if we aren't going to be able to use diesel in the future.
      Why not upload a video and explain your reasoning.

    • @TheTwistedStone
      @TheTwistedStone Před 2 měsíci

      @@Banditmanuk Plenty of eco alternatives to diesel fuel that will power regular diesel vehicles and some of the newer diesel engines are the cleanest on the planet so why the change ?

  • @Rob-zx8lm
    @Rob-zx8lm Před rokem +13

    Brilliant! JCB, British innovation at it's best. So exciting. Well done Lord Bamford & JCB expertise

  • @alanfenwick9307
    @alanfenwick9307 Před rokem +3

    Brilliant presentation, very informative. Thank you Harry

  • @LoneWolf731000
    @LoneWolf731000 Před rokem +5

    Amazing, very impressive! Almost no limits for great engineering!

  • @hounslowparks2469
    @hounslowparks2469 Před rokem +44

    Great innovation from JCB and definitely the right early adoption move for the company to thrive in the market.

    • @HiberNAT
      @HiberNAT Před rokem +2

      A lot of more pressures and more parts, inservicable and expensive

    • @jukeseyable
      @jukeseyable Před rokem +6

      sadly not. hydrogen is a dead end as it requires massive amounts of electricity to make it. there are 3 grades of hydrogen Green blue and brown, the green is as you would expect enviromentally friendly. but the brown and blue come with massive Co2 creation. The brown is made directly from coal

    • @GoogleAreDumb
      @GoogleAreDumb Před rokem +6

      It's grossly more efficient to use the electricity to charge a battery than to produce hydrogen. You need on the order of 5-10x as much electricity to produce the requisite amount of hydrogen, as you would if you'd just charged a battery and used an electric motor.
      I work with hydrogen in aviation. It has a small number of niche use cases. But it is not viable for cars, heating, and frankly I highly doubt the cost per kWh for agriculture will ever allow this to be adopted by farmers.

    • @jukeseyable
      @jukeseyable Před rokem +2

      @@Daniel-S1 if you had taken the time to read my comments you will see that I clearly state that there are 3 types of hydrogen , green, blue and brown. What you are talking about here is termed green hydrogen. unfortunately it is the least produced version accounting for less than 5% as it is the most expensive of the methords

    • @jonathancullen1337
      @jonathancullen1337 Před rokem +1

      ​@@jukeseyableIf you had taken the time to do some proper research you would know that there are many more colours of H2. Pink (nuclear) Grey (Nat. Gas) Black (coal) Brown (Lignite) Blue (Nat. Gas with CCS ie a con job) Green (electrolysis via renewable energy) and even turquoise, yellow and white. Take your pick lol

  • @bentheop
    @bentheop Před rokem +93

    Great video Harry! I had the chance to spend a week at the JCB test site quarry last summer for work experience and got to try out the hydrogen machines. It's really amazing how much technology has progressed with these engines. I think 2023 is going to be a really exciting year for more developments!

    • @fishwars5979
      @fishwars5979 Před rokem

      Yeah like my self cleaning pants .who gives a shit? We won't be around when this if at all becomes the norm.

    • @seanwalsh4142
      @seanwalsh4142 Před rokem +2

      @@fishwars5979 What happens to the shit on your pants? Does the self cleaning feature require more energy to clean than the energy input. Shit stain :Force = Mass x Velocity squared divided by area affected.

    • @Tim091
      @Tim091 Před rokem

      JCB could make money selling "Experiences" at the test site quarry!

    • @patrickchang-leng1073
      @patrickchang-leng1073 Před 10 měsíci

      Love your comment, could you advise on how my recently graduated son could get work experience at JCB? The future is looking a lot brighter.

  • @spotontheroad1
    @spotontheroad1 Před rokem +14

    Great video Harry. One of the best. Thank god we have people like Lord Bamford and his chaps. I have no doubt they are treading the right path. Great stuff. Keep us updated👍

  • @jacklav1
    @jacklav1 Před 2 měsíci

    Fantastic video. I love how enthusiastic and excited the JCB engineers are about the project.
    At a cost of £15 per litre- at today’s prices hydrogen will cost £150 per day. At £20 per hour + overheads an excavator driver might cost £240. The hydrogen is not insignificant, but it is not going to dominate the cost of doing a job with an off-road vehicle.
    I can see this being adopted for work in ULEZ zones, and spreading out from there.

  • @edmundhodgson2572
    @edmundhodgson2572 Před rokem +5

    Brilliant. Great British engineering with a confident commitment. Light at the end of the tunnel.

  • @aidan5097
    @aidan5097 Před rokem +37

    People used to joke 'hydrogen is the fuel of tomorrow... and it always will be.' It looks like tomorrow is finally arriving - well done Lord Bamford and JCB! Politicians can decide what they like but it will always be real world innovators who shape the future. Great video Harry, exciting times.

    • @Ingens_Scherz
      @Ingens_Scherz Před rokem +1

      I thought that joke was about nuclear fusion reactors, wasn't it? (Not hydrogen.)

    • @lucylovitt9583
      @lucylovitt9583 Před rokem

      Politicians do not make decisions - corporations DO! Same the world over

    • @rogerphelps9939
      @rogerphelps9939 Před rokem

      Actuallyhysrogen is still the fuel of tomorrow.

    • @bleydmcfaddin3843
      @bleydmcfaddin3843 Před rokem

      ​​@@Ingens_Scherz it was both bro

  • @butlerpa100
    @butlerpa100 Před rokem +8

    Lord Bamford. A forward thinking man. Respect

  • @MitzvosGolem1
    @MitzvosGolem1 Před rokem +1

    I have a JCB backhoe 214 excellent
    Allis Chalmers had a hydrogen fuel cell farm tractor experiment in 1954.
    Excellent 👍 Cheers

  • @Olliegunns
    @Olliegunns Před rokem +14

    Great video Harry, you asked all the technical questions many journalists in the construction industry haven’t asked in their visits. And thank you for putting the nox question to them. As an owner of construction plant I am following developments of JCB and hydrogen very closely. Battery tech as it stands just won’t cut it for us

    • @brushlessmotoring
      @brushlessmotoring Před rokem +3

      I'd be curious on some diesel L/hour numbers for different types of equipment, and typical run times for single shifts, when you say batteries wont cut it - nothing will be a drop in replacement for a 350L diesel tank, not hydrogen either, its a crazy amount of energy in a small light easy to handle liquid - a true miracle fuel - but if we are going to move past it, we will need to inconvenience ourselves a little, the question is, how much are willing to adjust our ways? Because if it's "it must be the same as diesel" then you will never get there.

    • @maxtorque2277
      @maxtorque2277 Před rokem +3

      @@brushlessmotoring Doing the maths shows that a battery electric solution isn't actually THAT far away if you can enable battery swapping ie not have to wait to charge batteries on the vehicle itself, which seems eminently possible for large plant machinery
      350 litres of diesel at 36.9 MJ/litre is indeed a huge total energy store of 12.9GJ of energy.
      However an internal combustion engine only turns about 20% of that energy into useful work when run at typical (variable) loads and a hydraulic power transfer system is mono-drectional and again has poor efficiency. Studies in fact show average installed efficiency for industrial hydrualics at just 22%! Even if we generously suggest that for something like an excavator the hydrualics manage 33% efficiency that means the machine actually delivers 774 MJ of work from that 350 litre tank (6% percent efficiency tank to work........)
      774MJ could be delivered with a battery electric system of around 860Mj input energy, which is 240 kWh. Yes that's a big battery, but not ridiculously so in terms of mass and bulk when we are talking about heavy plant machinery. (around 1,200 kg / 380 litres of battery). As battery cell costs fall and the operators start to understand the lower running costs of battery electric machinery, i expect these sorts of solutions to rapidly take over.

    • @rogerphelps9939
      @rogerphelps9939 Před rokem

      Wrong. He was farr too uncritical. A proper investigator woulf have torn it to shreds.

    • @rogerphelps9939
      @rogerphelps9939 Před 3 měsíci

      He actually dived into the minutiae of something that is pretty conventional and completely ignored rthe massive hydrogen elephants in the room.

  • @johnhaynes9910
    @johnhaynes9910 Před rokem +77

    Great to see, I remember watching your previous visit to JCB and it is great to see how far they have progressed their development, at least one British manufacturer who gets on with it ! Obviously the fly in the ointment is the production of green hydrogen but I'm totally in agreement with you, the end result will be a 'mixed' solution rather than one size fits all. I have always thought that the emphasis on electric cars which costs ridiculous amounts of money is totally misplaced, we need to tackle the big pollouters who run 12+ hours a day like buses, artics and trains to name a few.

    • @Wouter-van-der-Molen
      @Wouter-van-der-Molen Před rokem +8

      There are plenty of electric busses to choose from on the market already. It just gonna require govts buying and mandating them. my local area has electric busses only and houses Ebusco an electric bus firm selling them like hot cakes.

    • @gordonlennox4501
      @gordonlennox4501 Před rokem +12

      Not to mention supertankers traversing the globe. on a smaller scale the humble motorhomer who could run his hydrogen powered engine, heat and cook his meals all on hydrogen- now that diesel and LPG are becoming extinct.

    • @johnhaynes9910
      @johnhaynes9910 Před rokem +5

      @@Wouter-van-der-Molen And in the UK in the post war era, trolley buses and trams plus in more recent times hydrogen buses which have been around for a time too. I think the main point though is that the future will need several different 'solutions' rather than one. The problem with 'green' hydrogen currently is cost and for battery vehicles, weight and indeed, the very battery technology itself. Perhaps the most interesting vehicle shown was the hydrogen 'tanker' which would take the fuel to the vehicles where they are working, farms and construction sites.

    • @johnhaynes9910
      @johnhaynes9910 Před rokem +3

      @@gordonlennox4501 Absolutely, I was surprised to find how much polution shipping emits :)

    • @maxtorque2277
      @maxtorque2277 Před rokem +7

      Ha, if you think electric cars are "too expensive" i can't wait for you to find out the purchase and runing cost for a Hydrogen one....... ;-)

  • @henryhealy
    @henryhealy Před rokem +9

    Fantastic video Harry. This is fascinating and hats off to JCB for their work on this. Realistically, this seems like the future rather than batteries and EVs.

  • @aidanmcleod8987
    @aidanmcleod8987 Před 3 měsíci +1

    Great summary. With any energy ‘solution’ you have to consider the whole back story.

  • @edwardtapp1699
    @edwardtapp1699 Před rokem +3

    Great video Harry, Great to see a British company at the forefront of hydrogen power.

  • @gwpee1727
    @gwpee1727 Před rokem +9

    As someone who works for a company that converts trucks, we are currently struggling to go battery electric, for our specific application. Battery technology just isn't good enough, at present. We do convert CNG powered trucks, but they also have issues with range/hours in use. I just wonder if Hydrogen is much better. Hydrogen at high pressure is a bit worrying, if things go wrong , a road crash for example. Another problem is making hydrogen, its energy intensive. We'll see if anyone else in the construction/agri world( John Deere, Caterpillar etc) goes down this route.

    • @caterthun4853
      @caterthun4853 Před rokem +1

      Also the early hydrogen engines needed very clean air which resulted in frequent filter changes.

    • @backacheache
      @backacheache Před rokem +3

      @@caterthun4853 that was the fuel cell type, combustion engines like these aren't as fussy making them better for construction, farming, marine, etc.

    • @backacheache
      @backacheache Před rokem +1

      By thier nature, In a destructive situation the carbon-fibre tanks rip open (rather than go bang) and then the gas fly's away rather than be an ignition risk (as petrol would be)

    • @rohansprenger6902
      @rohansprenger6902 Před rokem +4

      @@backacheache at 350x atmospheric pressure, I'd rather not be anywhere near it if it "rips open".

    • @rkan2
      @rkan2 Před rokem

      @@rohansprenger6902 CNG is already 200-300.. Don't do steel tanks boys - there are a lot of videos of 10 year old cars making quite the havoc! (Most of them are just rusted out tanks that were supposed to be replaced already). Carbon fiber tanks should probably last 2-3 times that.

  • @mswallow1322
    @mswallow1322 Před 2 měsíci +1

    excellent explanation of the tech, and JCB are brilliant (despite Lord B!)

  • @nicolastardif5039
    @nicolastardif5039 Před rokem +3

    Very smart process JCB for designing from the ground up an entirely new engine that performs exactly the same as the older Diesel one! I congratulate you on your efforts to make our future greener and thank you from the bottom of my heart! Also to have thought of creating the vehicule that transports the Hydrogen to the machineries in the field in just brilliant! As an Engineer, I am so glad to see beautiful projects such as these come to light! Bravo!!!

    • @rogerphelps9939
      @rogerphelps9939 Před rokem +1

      JCB will end up like Morgan. An outdated irrelevance shackled to an outdated technology. The future is electric.

    • @walterrwrush
      @walterrwrush Před rokem

      When people can buy an electric one, no noise, electric actuators, no hydraulic oil, electricity from any source, why would you bother with all that complicated hydrogen tec slowly eating it own plumbing

  • @noelstevens6190
    @noelstevens6190 Před rokem +4

    Thanks for doing these videos Harry. I'm really interested in what the future holds and I found the first video to be very informative. This one is a great follow-up.

  • @Neil_Gordon
    @Neil_Gordon Před rokem +4

    Fascinating insight into the world of hydrogen powered machines. Really enjoyed watching. Great to see Stanley is back!

  • @honorharrington4546
    @honorharrington4546 Před rokem +2

    Imagine this, it's 11:00 pm on December 24th. You're 300 miles from home sitting in a Mall parking lot with nothing open for over a mile away. Only one spot at the charging station is working and it is SLOW, no fast charging available. It's going to get down to -20f tonight and your Heater is using 70% of the chargers output. You know the range of your vehicle is cut almost in half because of the temps and it will be morning before you get to 80% charge. You will need to charge two more times before you get home...hopefully before dark. Now, aren't you glad you're saving the planet and driving an electric vehicle!
    Thank You, Lord Bamford for giving us more options and Thank You, Harry for covering this technology.

    • @BillyBob-ri9pm
      @BillyBob-ri9pm Před měsícem

      Norway with almost 50% EV uptake now. Plus Sweden, Denmark and Finland with major electric vehicle uptake too, these have the highest uptake in Europe. But of course these are all countries with VERY warm climates.... just stop with the ICE disinformation it's getting boring now.

    • @honorharrington4546
      @honorharrington4546 Před měsícem

      @@BillyBob-ri9pm You can lead a man to water but you can't make him think. Ask any Ford dealer about all those F150 Lightnings that they can't keep in stock. Ask any Fire Department about how they are going to handle a Thermal Runaway Event caused by an EV accident or event... and what the health effects are going to be for the local population. It's not disinformation when it ca be backed op by international news reports!

  • @richardmosley4549
    @richardmosley4549 Před rokem +1

    Thanks Harry - these are some of the best videos you do. Mega hats off to JCB (British and family owned, remember!).

  • @cepheus7850
    @cepheus7850 Před rokem +10

    Harry, please make more videos about this, especially in terms of hydrogen production, transportation, storage, network of places to refill, etc. it feels like these aspects of hydrogen could use more light shined on them.

    • @tonedeafjd
      @tonedeafjd Před rokem

      Or you could just watch the Simpsons, same result.

    • @rogerphelps9939
      @rogerphelps9939 Před rokem +1

      Indeed. Then we will see that hydrogen is an expensive folly.

  • @johnwaga3702
    @johnwaga3702 Před rokem +3

    What a fascinating video and congratulations to JCB. The Government needs to pull its finger out and get realistic about its Net Zero goals.

  • @user-es2ju9np9s
    @user-es2ju9np9s Před měsícem

    JCB... a jewel in the crown of innovative British industry.

  • @johannwiseman5317
    @johannwiseman5317 Před rokem +4

    Thanks Harry good video, good to get some answers on the high Nox question and nice solution they have gone for lower firing temperature. One thing to keep in mind though, especially for mainstream products (cars) using high volumes of hydrogen would become problematic as the complete cycle efficiency from green energy to hydrogen makes it non competitive vs battery. Green energy converted into kinetic energy through a motor (~95% efficiency) and battery losses take to you say 80% efficiency. However, converting green energy to hydrogen through electrolysis 75%, then combustion at 40% gets you to 30% cycle efficiency before you have taken into account compression losses to pump it to high pressures. Happy to educate you more if you are interested!

    • @backacheache
      @backacheache Před rokem

      Your right, the maths don't work out for cars but for construction and marine these could be a game-changer.

  • @TheJohn8765
    @TheJohn8765 Před rokem +18

    Great to see more of your content on alternative fuels, Harry. I'm still not sold on the infrastructure and production sides of H for fuel (tho it's promising), but, moving forward, we obviously need to move to a carbon neutral setup yet the industrial and commercial sides of that is immense and doesn't get much press coverage .... Good on you for continuing to do so.

    • @AG-ie7nt
      @AG-ie7nt Před rokem

      Obvious? ... I think not. The sun drives our climate and the warmer the oceans the more Co2 is produced. We are helping the planet the more Co2 we produce, we are at 400ppm at the moment so dangerously close to the 120ppm which is the death of plants... DEATH OF PLANTS!!!! 4000ppm is when there is abundant life. Don't be fooled by the people that push climate lies, they just want to tax you. But at the current rate of oil usage we only have around 300 years... so no rush to find alternatives.
      You listen to controlled media... LIES LIES LIES
      Of coarse you won't listen because you have been hypnotised by the constant bombardment..

    • @grahamebennett3875
      @grahamebennett3875 Před 9 měsíci

      We don’t need to move away from Co2 . Ppm is only just 250 ppm over the death of plant life. We need more Co2 not less.

  • @markfletcher8040
    @markfletcher8040 Před rokem +6

    Congratulations to Lord Bamford, for the foresight into using hydrogen.
    And the engineers at JCB in making it work.
    Great program Harry

  • @davidjermy2524
    @davidjermy2524 Před 3 měsíci

    Brilliant video Harry. So interesting. I've said for a long time hydrogen is the future. Good for Farmers and environmental.

  • @Spoon-vy9jz
    @Spoon-vy9jz Před rokem

    This is the best vid you have done so far Harry. Well done to you and even more so to JCB.

  • @kayeninetwo3585
    @kayeninetwo3585 Před rokem +23

    When I was a kid in the '70's, people talked about hydrogen power, but many of those talking said it wasn't feasible. Nevertheless, it was thought that hydrogen - were it ever to materialize - could possibly be an answer to our biggest energy problems. Now that it's here, however, it sounds like there are still some obstacles to overcome. It will be interesting to see how this develops in the future. Thanks for an educational video.

    • @MyKharli
      @MyKharli Před rokem +9

      Its greenwash bs

    • @truth.speaker
      @truth.speaker Před rokem +6

      Hydrogen is merely an energy storage method
      Batteries work at 80% efficiency
      Hydrogen is closer to 30%. Meaning 70% of what you put in is wasted
      Innovation? Or hype?

    • @pauljshields123
      @pauljshields123 Před rokem

      The machine can work 24hrs two 12 shifts...electrical machine is parked up on charge. .

    • @truth.speaker
      @truth.speaker Před rokem +4

      @@pauljshields123 what building site is working 24 hours a day? Remember the infrastructure required to obtain hydrogen, even at ridiculous prices, that takes up lots of room or requires someone to leave site to take the machine to a high pressure filling site. It would be faster and more compact to just have 2 batteries or 2 machines and not need the additional infrastructure. It is also far cheaper.
      Charging is getting faster. It may be that one day we will be able to run a cable to charge the machine while working or fast charge it during breaks. Or just overnight charge it and use a bigger battery that lasts all day
      We can already build big batteries. Just stack more on. The technology and infrastructure is already present. So this so called advance that requires massive infrastructure that can't be done locally on site will not work. You can pour money into forcing it to work, but a better manufacturer will say "our machines use half the power and cost one third of our leading competitor. Choose our reliable option that doesn't put out water and rust. It is sealed and works in all weathers. Reliable and very cheap. Doesn't need taking off site to refill once a day, so saves on labour costs, and improves safety with a sealed cell power unit instead of liquid gas. There is no catastrophic risk if punctured."
      They will get every contract going because their option is so much cheaper, so much easier and so much safer. It doesn't need off site refuelling or require on site distilling plants taking up space, requiring training and massive energy costs, and increased risk and danger.
      This is not a suitable energy storage medium for building sites. Cars very seldom need driving for 20 hours straight, so even in cars it is unlikely most people would have much use for this new technology. Plus faster charging may one day mean a charge in minutes. It's not far off that already.

    • @Simon-dm8zv
      @Simon-dm8zv Před rokem +4

      @@truth.speaker Hydrogen in combustion engines is even worse than that 30%.

  • @kevinashurst634
    @kevinashurst634 Před rokem +14

    It takes 50 kWh of electricity to produce 1kg of hydrogen from pure water.

    • @wibblywobblyworldofboats6254
      @wibblywobblyworldofboats6254 Před rokem

      On that basis a hydrogen vehicle is about as energy efficient as an electric vehicle.

    • @kevinashurst634
      @kevinashurst634 Před rokem +2

      @@wibblywobblyworldofboats6254 err no. a hydrogen car will go about 60 miles on 1kg of hydrogen, A modern electric car will go about 180 miles on 50 kWh.

    • @wibblywobblyworldofboats6254
      @wibblywobblyworldofboats6254 Před rokem

      @@kevinashurst634 do your research a little more thoroughly and I think you will come to a different conclusion 🧐

    • @kevinashurst634
      @kevinashurst634 Před rokem

      @@wibblywobblyworldofboats6254 I have, please explain how a hydrogen car is as efficient as an EV?

    • @wibblywobblyworldofboats6254
      @wibblywobblyworldofboats6254 Před rokem

      @@kevinashurst634 it's plainly obvious that you're working from figures that have been pulled from the first page of Google. 🙈
      I give up.

  • @andrewbaker8373
    @andrewbaker8373 Před rokem

    Truly educational. Comprehensive breakdown of the how's . TY

  • @allanrobson7242
    @allanrobson7242 Před rokem +2

    What an excellent and very informative video, Harry. It's great for JCB to allow you to share this excellent technology. it looks like a better system to battery power.

  • @stuwilsonrallying
    @stuwilsonrallying Před rokem +6

    Great progress from JCB, hopefully other manufacturers will take it up to, especially the truck industry.
    Fantastic video keep this kind of content coming

  • @oldretireddude
    @oldretireddude Před rokem +5

    I love this, but no one talks about the loss of hydrogen while the equipment is unused, due to the pressure tank needing to relieve pressure as the tank warms up.

    • @johnhebenton1525
      @johnhebenton1525 Před rokem +1

      it's just the angel's share, works wonders for Whisky. Vintage Hydrogen anyone?

    • @0skar9193
      @0skar9193 Před 3 měsíci +1

      As systems are refined the small problems will be resolved. Everyone slating hydrogen are the same as people slating electric vehicles 10 years ago. Conventional ICE engines are safer & more efficient than they were 10 years ago. Investment drives innovation.

  • @michaeldonohoe621
    @michaeldonohoe621 Před rokem

    Lord Bamford is a inspiration a innovator. The UK 🇬🇧 should be very proud of this representative of forward thinking. JCB is a world 🌎 market leader 👏 🇬🇧🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🇬🇧😊👌

  • @user-nb5sr7by6y
    @user-nb5sr7by6y Před 4 měsíci

    Excellent video. I am more than encouraged by this example of excellence.

  • @vidarsten-halvorsen8748
    @vidarsten-halvorsen8748 Před rokem +12

    Great video, and great efforts by JCB. Could be interesting to learn more about the efficiency comparisons with Fuel Cells. Historically FuelCells have been more efficient. As a side note it is interesting to see that the drive to hydrogen in Construction Industry is driven by Historic Racing entusiast Lord Bamford. Our company Applied Hydrogen doing similar work but with Fuel Cells are also run by Historic Motorsport enthusiasts. We bring the world forward with our passion.

  • @Jhcx1
    @Jhcx1 Před rokem +4

    Very exciting. Im delighted to see such a big company is pushing for this technology. it wont be today or tomorrow that we will see it perfect but you have got to start somewhere. Just like the first ICE engines they weren't perfect and took awhile to get to where they re today. please bring more videos like this. Loved watching this.

  • @martinjones8220
    @martinjones8220 Před rokem

    Nice to see people doing rather than preaching . Well done .

  • @performancedownunder5773

    Absolutely brilliant video Harry, thanks for that.

  • @allenbutcher5848
    @allenbutcher5848 Před rokem +16

    Great video, Harry, and a good follow up to your July 2021 video. It is so disappointing that the British Government seems to be totally focused on electric as the only solution to meeting zero emissions in spite of all its well recognised shortcomings. Maybe we should all be writing to our MPs to wake them up to alternatives such as this one you have highlighted here. Keep this stuff coming!

    • @flipperth1
      @flipperth1 Před rokem

      The government are a waste of space. They’re only looking out for themselves - it’s got to be up to industry (and companies like JCB) to sort this out. Just have to sort out hydrogen infrastructure.

    • @caterthun4853
      @caterthun4853 Před rokem +2

      Also they seem to believe against the expert opinion that hydrogen will replace domestic gas boilers and hobs. Hydrogen is a difficult gas to contain and pipework in ground just not practical. Also problem of nox being produced in kitchens

    • @tonys1636
      @tonys1636 Před rokem +1

      @@caterthun4853 Biogas answers that its Methane (natural gas) produced by a biodigester fed with food and animal waste. Not only producing gas but high quality natural (odour free) fertiliser/compost as well. No more complaining neighbours to the farmer next door for slurry/muck heap spreading. Already producing it here and feeding it into the gas network.

    • @brushlessmotoring
      @brushlessmotoring Před rokem +1

      @@caterthun4853 can you clarify your statement? I think you missed a 'not' somewhere.
      Electric cooking is the way to go. Combusting piped hydrogen in the home would be nuts.

    • @backacheache
      @backacheache Před rokem +2

      @@brushlessmotoring He's referring to biomethane where you clean-up the methane coming from a digester and pump it into the mains-gas network, however looking at it purely from a financial perspective it makes more sense to use the dirty methane in a compatible generator rather than spending money on cleaning it up to mains-gas standards. One answer though is to use a cleaner feedstock in the digester such as grass (which in turn can be fed by the compost left over)

  • @joeseels
    @joeseels Před rokem +5

    Really interesting video Harry! Hydrogen seems an easier shift, than the use of batteries for our bigger kit 😊

    • @backacheache
      @backacheache Před rokem +1

      Yes, hydrogen for jcb's upwards and battery's for everything else

  • @ebutuoyYT
    @ebutuoyYT Před rokem +1

    Mass transport using battery-electric and heavy machinery using hydrogen would be an excellent pragmatic solution, especially in terms of the infrastructure challenges of using only hydrogen or only battery-electric, for all forms of transport / machinery.
    Of course e-fuels for certain classic cars / bikes and motorsport are a must. The e-fuel should be close to carbon neutral, and whatever tailpipe emissions are produced will so insignificant, if used by a relatively small number of users, that the cultural and emotional benefits of classic cars and motorsport will more than compensate for them.

  • @gerardjohnson2106
    @gerardjohnson2106 Před rokem

    Very INTERESTING. Thanks for sharing.

  • @HotAxleBox
    @HotAxleBox Před rokem +5

    This is an excellent video, as a diesel engineer im watching the hydrogen world with a keen eye.
    I do wonder what the crash protection of the storage tanks is like, 350bar is a huge amount of pressure to let go.
    The huge RPM of the turbocharger makes me wonder if that's a single point of failure.

    • @kawasakikev8905
      @kawasakikev8905 Před rokem

      some turbos already spin at 280,000 in petrol engines , Diesels spin slower ,i think what they have achieved is a turbo that spins very quickly at low engine revs but not a turbo that spins any faster than a petrol turbo .

    • @lipsee100
      @lipsee100 Před rokem

      I think you have probably seen a turbo glowing red/white hot and still run reliably ,I think a few revs will not do any harm. Also I have drove gas Scania,s with carbon tanks on the sides with no issues.

  • @nickwebb9290
    @nickwebb9290 Před rokem +6

    A superb post there Harry. It strikes me again having watched the previous video two years ago that Lord Bamford is an amazing chap. I really hope all JCB’s R&D efforts can win the day commercially. I do have my concerns about Hydrogen production but hopefully they know something that we don’t.
    Fingers crossed that if there’s a Part 3 to this story that the final outcome is a good one

    • @lucylovitt9583
      @lucylovitt9583 Před rokem

      30.000 farms and temporary building sites putting in hydrogen storage and safety facilities.....you really think that's viable?

    • @StevenLangdale
      @StevenLangdale Před rokem

      It won't win. Hydrogen combustion engines are about 20-25% efficient. Hydrogen fuel cell engines, anywhere between 40-60%. Only one technology will prevail.

    • @nickwebb9290
      @nickwebb9290 Před rokem

      @@StevenLangdale
      You’d better get in touch and tell JCB then, it’s no good telling me

  • @marcvivier4887
    @marcvivier4887 Před 2 měsíci

    Thank you for a well presented and informative video! 🎉😊

  • @williamford7966
    @williamford7966 Před rokem

    Great video, thank you for sharing.

  • @ZipZoomZip
    @ZipZoomZip Před rokem +3

    There is no known path to get hydrogen anywhere near cost-parity to diesel. It's like saying "When we develop fusion, electricity will be too cheap to meter." Well, yeah, but we don't know how to do fusion commercially, just like we can't make and transport green hydrogen in anything near a cost-effective manner. Diesel is a major cost of farming on a large scale. Hydrogen would make farmers go broke and people go hungry.

    • @JStraino
      @JStraino Před měsícem

      We've gotta start somewhere mate. There was probably people saying the same thing about petrol/diesel with the first combustion engines. Before Fuel tankers, oil rigs and petrol stations. They didn't just build that infrastructure stuff for fun before the combustion engine

  • @WilliamStevens007
    @WilliamStevens007 Před rokem +4

    That almost sounds like a diesel engine to me. Going to be interesting to see this develop.

  • @ededmonds8792
    @ededmonds8792 Před 3 měsíci

    JCB is doing GREAT work.❤

  • @mu8554
    @mu8554 Před rokem

    Fantastic-This country does still matter and this work by JCB proves that-simply fantastic...

  • @SlipShodBob
    @SlipShodBob Před rokem +31

    On a tour of the Cummings factory 20 years ago they said that they believed if an engineer could come up with a commercially viable method for storing gas in a similar volume as diesel in a compact size they would be billionaires.
    It is certainly an interesting direction along with the CNH methane engines it will be interesting to see the true viability in the sector as a lot is certainly going to depend on infrastructure especially given how a lot of locals view planning applications for such things .

    • @rogerphelps9939
      @rogerphelps9939 Před rokem

      Storin g high pressure hydrogen is an expensive and dangerous business. That is why hydrogen has not caught on in cars and won't catch on in tractors either.

    • @the_lost_navigator7266
      @the_lost_navigator7266 Před rokem

      Cummins are already building Hydrogen engines too. Interesting to see it develop.

    • @blueocean2510
      @blueocean2510 Před rokem

      Dacia have Duel Fuel, LPG & petrol. The LPG tank is fitted in space for spare wheel. LPG is good value and gives good mileage.

  • @warwickritch
    @warwickritch Před rokem +19

    I really enjoyed this. This sounds really promising and I hope this can find its way into all sorts of vehicles. EV, hydrogen and alternative fuels is a well rounded approach to sorting the issue.

  • @benpattinson1
    @benpattinson1 Před rokem

    Absolutely superb work from JCB Harry. And thank you for that insightful video.

  • @ginggur17
    @ginggur17 Před rokem

    Brilliant Harry, thankyou for sharing. 🙏🙏🙏👍🇬🇧

  • @jasone205
    @jasone205 Před rokem +5

    I can't help feeling this could all go very wrong and bankrupt JCB. It's a high risk strategy and I hope it works out.

    • @Toby_the_Glen
      @Toby_the_Glen Před rokem +1

      Big investors have decided that electric will be out future. Because they can make so much money out of it!

    • @rjhtrucking5429
      @rjhtrucking5429 Před rokem

      This country, like all western nations is already bankrupt. I don't think jcb will go bankrupt though, as the jcb plant in India can continue to manufacture derv power plants and trade with the new emerging markets in the east , collectively known as " Brics". Unfortunately the site at uttoxeter would have to close !
      Of course this could be avoided if net zero was abolished , it is after all a , Teresa May initiative.

    • @0skar9193
      @0skar9193 Před 3 měsíci

      Hugh risk high reward. Its ballsy but true innovators have big ones!

    • @Discoworx
      @Discoworx Před 2 měsíci

      Don't see it being such a huge risk. It's not like a whole new line has been set up.

  • @Homegaarden
    @Homegaarden Před rokem +7

    Love the video, but something doesn’t add up. They said the machine hold 6-10kg of hydrogen. Now hydrogen contain around 3 times more energy than diesel in a kg for kg comparison. Now they also said the efficiency is about the same , which makes sense as the are both using combustion. But a tractor store 300 to 500L and some days that is not enough to go a full day. With the hydrogen we would then have to refil 10 times in one day! Also the well to wheel efficiency of burning hydrogen is just pathetic 😅

    • @brushlessmotoring
      @brushlessmotoring Před rokem +1

      I was trying to work out how many kWh of battery you would need for half a day of operating, with a battery swap between shifts ... I think it's 200kWh, same as the Hummer EV battery pack, and then use the battery mass as a counterweight. Charge one while you are using another.

    • @Homegaarden
      @Homegaarden Před rokem +1

      A 300hp tractor pulling a cultivator would burn 50L an hour. That’s the same as 600kwh, worth in diesel. Since a electric drivetrain is around 4 times more efficient we would need use 150kWh every hour 😅

    • @brushlessmotoring
      @brushlessmotoring Před rokem +2

      @@Homegaarden that sounds right. For a car, it's about 2.5kWh of electricity per L of gasoline to go the same distance, you have it at 3kWh per L, I could see the efficiency of a diesel engine making up the difference. A hydrogen fuel cell can go 100km on 1kg, an EV uses 18kWh, a Civic 7.2L of gasoline. Hydrogen combustion is less efficient than a fuel cell.
      You are not going to replace a 350L diesel tank with a 1000kWh battery, some compromise needs to be made, and run time is it. Swapping allows minimal downtime, and also allows the replaced battery some time to charge back up again. It will probably be no different to the hydrogen refill timing based on a 6-10kg tank, and probably be quicker too - at best a tank to tank transfer can equalize the pressure of both tanks, but you need a compressor to fully empty the source tank.
      Electricity will be 10 times cheaper than hydrogen.

  • @gallomimia7780
    @gallomimia7780 Před 2 měsíci

    Bravo! Amazing. Great video. Unbelievable progress in a fuel source they said was unviable. It seems storage medium have developed far better than battery technology.

  • @KevinBower-gy5be
    @KevinBower-gy5be Před 5 měsíci

    Sir Anthony Bamford. A true captain of industry.

  • @agronorth2640
    @agronorth2640 Před rokem +6

    Very interesting video Harry! Fantastic to see how fast their progress has been going. But I think batteries biggest advantage over hydrogen is still the price. it's just so much cheaper and most of the problems with long charging can be done with battery swap or fast charging. Anyway its great either way which will be used :)

    • @bru512
      @bru512 Před rokem +1

      Can you provide a reference on your "Cheaper" claim?

    • @agronorth2640
      @agronorth2640 Před rokem +1

      @@bru512 Sure. it will depend on different markets. but with batteries charged from solar/wind directly it is about 3 cents or less. from the grid it would be between 10 and 20 cents(depending on where). batteries will have a cost of about 2-10 cents over lifetime. so with this its is between 2-5 times cheaper than diesel or hydrogen at its current state

    • @agronorth2640
      @agronorth2640 Před rokem

      and even with only fast charging its still cheaper at about 3-5 cents per kwh

    • @simonhenry7867
      @simonhenry7867 Před rokem

      ​@@bru512 a 3 pin cost about £100 to put in.
      The cheapest hydrogen fuel pump is about $2000000
      And you can't really drop the price per mile below £0.15 per mile, (if fuel was free)

  • @demsweden
    @demsweden Před rokem +5

    The biggest problem for hydrogen is the distribution. It requires rughly to ten times more lorrys to distribute hydrogen than diesel. Thanks for a nice vid!!

    • @0skar9193
      @0skar9193 Před 3 měsíci +1

      Does it? Surely at higher compression less volume is required for the same return for kWh per g as diesel.

  • @choppermarc2342
    @choppermarc2342 Před rokem

    Loved the video. Thank you Harry JCB and the pooch.

  • @Louisa93able
    @Louisa93able Před rokem

    Thanks Harry; congratulations to JCB, but without your presentation people like me would not know about it.

  • @amazoniaamazonia7225
    @amazoniaamazonia7225 Před rokem +5

    Hymn, We have to diversify and explore every avenue when it comes to energy, but as far as Hydrogen is concerned there are two huge obstacles to overcome, cost of production and storage. Understandably Bamford is creating a big spin on this , but considering he is a close friend and leading sponsor of Borris Johnson, I wouldn’t necessarily believe all what he says.

  • @jncg2311
    @jncg2311 Před rokem +5

    Working on the edge of the development of bio-hydrogen technologies, it's great to see the other end of the hydrogen fuel system so well developed - this will push others in the sector significantly I hope.
    Really good video, thank you.

  • @jameslindley924
    @jameslindley924 Před rokem

    This is a Real Big Feather in the Cap of ""British Engineering"" !!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Gives a Feeling of Pride !!!!!! Good On Ya JCB and Sir Bamford and All the Team.
    Though i believe CAT has a Hydro engine for many years

  • @flytwin1772
    @flytwin1772 Před rokem +1

    Yes, that´s the surely the future as well as synthetic fuel, thanks Harry!

  • @browpetj
    @browpetj Před rokem +3

    That level of engineering development work is quite amazing in 2 yrs! So proud this is a UK company. Good stuff! 😮😊😮

  • @richardallsop5039
    @richardallsop5039 Před rokem +3

    Hello Again, Well Harry this really just shows what a company (JCB) can do when the owner wants to make changes, brilliant, very impressive and well explained. Regards, RichardA.

    • @rogerphelps9939
      @rogerphelps9939 Před 3 měsíci

      Bamford is deluded if he thinks hydrogen is the future.

  • @edspencer7121
    @edspencer7121 Před rokem

    It would be a safe bet that within 1, possibly 2 generations, a fair amount of the world could go into hydrogen power. Unfortunately, I won't be around to witness that. Except for videos like this. Thank you for sharing.

  • @user-kr8lx9te7s
    @user-kr8lx9te7s Před měsícem

    I have a 3.5 litre car. Wouldn't it be nice if I could retro-fit an hydrogen power plant? Brilliant work JCB and great video Harry.

  • @simonyapp
    @simonyapp Před rokem +12

    I worry about the storage of Hydrogen as it is kept around 350 > 700 Bar. I foresee nasty tank explosions in the early days of this gas being deployed on sites and farms. You're a brave man standing that close to the tanks.
    I agree charging battery-based building site or farm machines in remote areas is not going to work in many cases.
    But we must not forget that once you produce this gas, compress it, transport it, and burn it in an engine, you only get around 28% of the energy you put in at the start. So everything we can electrify we should for sure before reaching for Hydrogen.
    I agree for some long lorry/truck trips that have to be over 400 miles or long-distance shipping, then Hydrogen is one of the only options. But there are plenty of lorry routes under 400 miles where an electric truck will work fine. The Regen braking on a battery lorry will re-capture up to 20% of the energy on a typical run and do over 90% of the stopping work, whereas a Hydrogen lorry would need to apply the old style brakes, which need replacing just like diesel trucks, thus still generating brake dust.
    I am sad, Harry, that you dismissed the work of Tesla, and the Tesla Semi, a large full truck capable of up to 425 miles at full load (37 tons). This could replace many routes in the UK and is 90% more efficient than any Hydrogen truck can ever be. Also, engines that burn fuel or gas still need oil changes and new parts as you found out, producing parts has a carbon impact at every service interval. Electric motors do not, and the battery can be recycled at the end of its life.
    As you say, it needs to be a multi-pronged approach.
    Thanks for the video and for getting us debating.

    • @Hazellh
      @Hazellh Před rokem +9

      Great to see another person flagging the Hydrogen Hierarchy- its uses should be limited to specific industries due to its incredibly inefficient production.

    • @masaukochitsamba7808
      @masaukochitsamba7808 Před rokem

      Batteries may be viable for small vehicles and even trucks, as you have pointed out with your example of a Tesla semis, I just don't see them replacing diesel engines in the huge machines used in constructions and the mining industry. Unless geniuses out there come up with a light batteries, diesel will still be the energy source for heavy duty works and if governments ban diesel then hydrogen may become a viable alternative. The fact that the tesla semi is still not yet in production four or five years after Musk showed it off to the public says it all really. I will be convinced of its viability once I see a tesla semi pull 30 tons and achieve range greater than 700 miles.

    • @jimbaumann6579
      @jimbaumann6579 Před rokem +3

      You’re delusional if you think electric equipment & batteries won’t require maintenance or replacement

    • @lipsee100
      @lipsee100 Před rokem +1

      I agree a multi approach,,, and I can see why you would be hesitant about Hydrogen tanks, but have you thought about the fire hazard of the kind of battery being proposed for a 40ton truck.. If that battery self ignites it will be weeks before it can be put out.. No there is no easy solution,and EVs are certainly not the all in one option.

    • @lucylovitt9583
      @lucylovitt9583 Před rokem

      @@masaukochitsamba7808 Mines started changing to electric machinery in late 21 - one of the huge advantages: no exhaust fumes in underground tunnels..

  • @smurf9857
    @smurf9857 Před rokem +9

    Very interesting! Kudos to JCB for making the investment and sharing it with you.
    Perhaps a fuel for the bigger family cars as well in the future?

  • @Sangamkr
    @Sangamkr Před rokem

    Great video. thanks for the insights, harry.

  • @TheObSeRvErTheObSeRv
    @TheObSeRvErTheObSeRv Před 3 měsíci

    Great video Harry`s Farm.