List of hydrogen internal combustion engine vehicles
A hydrogen internal combustion engine vehicle is a vehicle powered by a hydrogen-fueled internal combustion engine. Some versions are hydrogen–gasoline hybrids.
1800s
- 1807 – Francois Isaac de Rivaz – the De Rivaz engine, the first internal combustion engine using hydrogen as a fuel
- 1863 – Étienne Lenoir – Hippomobile
BMW
- 2002 – BMW 750hL
- 2007 – Hydrogen 7 is powered by a dual-fuel internal combustion engine–liquid hydrogen
- 2007 – BMW H2R speed record car – ICE–liquid hydrogen
CMB.TECH (Compagnie Maritime Belge)
Source:- 2017 – Hydroville – a hydrogen internal combustion engine ferry
- 2021 – Dual Fuel Truck – a hydrogen internal combustion engine truck
- 2021 – Hydrobingo – a hydrogen internal combustion engine ferry
- 2022 – HydroTug – a hydrogen internal combustion engine tugboat
Hydrogen Car Company
- Hydrogen Car Company hydrogen-converted Nissan Frontier
- Hydrogen Car Company hydrogen-converted Shelby Cobra
Intergalactic Hydrogen
- Intergalactic Hydrogen hydrogen-converted Hummer
Mini
- MINI Hatch/Cooper "CleanEnergy" is a running experimental concept car with a dual-fuel engine
Mahindra & Mahindra
- Mahindra HyAlfa: a hydrogen internal combustion engine auto rickshaw
Ford
- 2001 – Ford P2000 concept car using the Zetec 2.0L engine.
- 2006 – F-250 Super Chief a "Tri-Flex" engine concept pickup
- 2006 – Ford E-450 H2ICE Shuttle Bus a 12-passenger shuttle bus with a supercharged V10 fueled by compressed hydrogen
Mazda
- 1991 – Mazda HR-X hydrogen Rotary
- 1993 – Mazda HR-X2 hydrogen Rotary
- 1993 – Mazda MX-5 Miata hydrogen Rotary
- 1995 – Mazda Capella, first public street test of the hydrogen Rotary engine
- 2003 – Mazda RX-8 Hydrogen RE hydrogen-gasoline hybrid Rotary
- 2005 – Mazda Premacy Hydrogen RE Hybrid
- 2007 – Mazda Hydrogen RE Plug in Hybrid
Aston Martin
- Aston Martin, together with Alset GmbH, constructed the Aston Martin Hybrid Hydrogen Rapide S, a dual-fuel gasoline and hydrogen powered car used during 24H Nurburgring 2013
Revolve (Acquired by CMB.TECH)
Source:- 2010 – Ford Transit H2ICE
Alpine
Chevrolet
- 2010 Silverado
Ronn Motor">Ronn Motor Company">Ronn Motor
- 2008 – Scorpion
[Tokyo City University]
- 1974 – Musashi-1
- 1975 – Musashi-2
- 1977 – Musashi-3
- 1980 – Musashi-4
- 1982 – Musashi-5
- 1984 – Musashi-6
- 1986 – Musashi-7
- 1990 – Musashi-8
- 1994 – Musashi-9
- 1997 – Musashi-10
Toyota
[University of California, Riverside]
- 1992 – Ford Ranger
- 2000 – Modified Shelby Cobra It achieved a respectable 108.16 mph, missing the world record for hydrogen powered vehicles by 0.1 mph.