Buriram Expats

Buriram Province - General Category => Isaan Motor Forum => Topic started by: Admin on September 03, 2008, 10:20:22 PM

Title: A car that runs 200 miles on compressed air.
Post by: Admin on September 03, 2008, 10:20:22 PM
The CityCat is a new(2 years old) French invention (production in India) of car working on air pressure power.
I think its a great idea..as long as you filled it with enough air as its good for up to 200 miles between pump 2 pump (air).

Max speed 110 km/hour.

Price: 3500 Euro.

See the video here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ztFDqcu8oJ4&feature=related

WHAT DO YOU THINK? jumping4



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Title: Re: A car that runs 200 miles on compressed air.
Post by: Admin on September 12, 2008, 05:59:34 PM
 fighting1 Buriramians ! ! !  character1
Title: Re: A car that runs 200 miles on compressed air.
Post by: Admin on September 24, 2008, 03:38:10 PM
Maybe this can be interesting for you to read?? ....... confused3

Record single day increase in oil prices 
Bangkok Post: 23 Sep 2008
Oil prices leap by 25 pct on US buyout concerns

Washington (dpa) - The price of crude oil climbed by $25 per barrel on Monday, the largest jump ever over worries of a weakened dollar prompted by US government plans to buy failing mortgages from the troubled finance industry, Bloomberg news reported.

The Bush administration is proposing a massive $700-billion to $800- billion plan to bailout the finance industry, which has been at the heart of the flailing US economy. The buyout has increased concerns about the federal government's growing budget deficit.

The financial woes on Wall Street has boosted the appeal of commodities like oil.

"Gold, silver, oil, copper, just about any hard asset, is looking good at this point," Michael Fitzpatrick, vice president for energy risk management at MF Global Ltd in New York, told Bloomberg. "With the dollar down and stocks getting hit, commodities look like a safe play."

The price of oil for October delivery on the New York Mercantile Exchange jumped by $25 to $130 a barrel, before settling at $120.92, or a 16.37-dollar increase for the day's trading.