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Everybody keeps watching gas prices " today in the $3.60s " wondering how long it will take to reach $4 a gallon.

And Frankfort developer C. Michael Davenport wonders how long it will be before his new compressed air car will arrive in America. He hopes it gets here for the capital city Christmas parade.

Last August Davenport, creator of Prevention Park, took his first trip overseas " to south France to meet Guy Ngre, inventor of the compressed-air engine.

The four-day trip came not long after Davenport Googled "alternative energy vehicles" on his home computer one evening. Up popped Ngre's car company, MDI " Moteur Developpment International.
Davenport's purple and red car will be gasoline- and carbon-emissions free. It will reach a maximum speed of 68 mph and can travel 120 miles before needing to be recharged.

The six-seat car will be 11.2 feet long, 5.4 feet wide and 5.6 feet tall, and weigh 836 pounds. It will cost an estimated $16,000 to $19,000. Some models have a steering wheel in the middle.

The air tanks contain carbon and will split if the car is wrecked to prevent exploding shrapnel.

"I have always been fascinated with alternative energy," Davenport says. "For as long as I can remember I've always said we have to quit using fossil fuels to propel ourselves from one place to another."

Davenport says in the late 1970s he converted his Ford Ranchero to run on propane gas. But getting a vehicle that runs on compressed air is more exciting, he admits.

"Everybody (at the prototype factory) in France was incredibly nice and amazingly open," Davenport says.

"When I met Mr. Ngre, the inventor, I felt like I was talking to Alexander Graham Bell. He must be a genius. But I wonder if even he realizes what this could mean to the world " not just America.

"As soon as I walked in the door of his business, I thought this is meant to be. My son Chamberlin's favorite color is purple and the first thing I saw was a purple (prototype) car."

Before Ngre invented the air compressed engine he worked in aeronautics, then moved onto Formula 1 racing cars as an engineer with the Renault racing team.

Davenport says the MDI cars definitely look different.

"But I like different," he says. "It will tickle me to death when I can drive around and not burn a drop of fossil fuel. We hear talk about cars now getting 30, 40 or 50 mpg. With the MDI car I'm getting, there are no gallons. We're not talking about reduced or low emissions, we're talking zero emissions.

"It may not have the shape, size or look that everybody likes. And it certainly doesn't even remotely match the luxury we've become accustomed to in America. But this is just the infancy of this technology.

"If this catches on, we can put our American ingenuity to it " our sound systems and GPS and heated seats and power windows. I don't know that Alexander Graham Bell's first telephone had caller ID."

The car runs with a "click-click-click" sound," Davenport says. It has a range of 120 miles before needing a recharge.

"I don't travel 120 miles most days, so that's not a deterrent for me," Davenport says.

"If I need to drive to Cincinnati, I can go to a gas station and simply charge it in a matter of minutes. When I'm finished for the day, I can plug it in and recharge it at home.

He says Ngre is working on a system to put solar panels on a car roof "to power a generator to recharge the air tank while you're driving. If he hits on that, it's going to be incredible. He's also working on a hybrid, mixing gas-power with his air compression to extend the mileage range for people."

Davenport is so fascinated by Ngre's work that he has purchased stock in the company. He declined to say how much he has invested. But he believes it's enough to be eligible to purchase an MDI car soon after it becomes available on the market.

Davenport says he doesn't know how many more steps have to be taken before he will be the proud owner of an MDI air car.

"I don't know if before one can be brought to America, you have to put crash dummies in it and run it into a wall at 68 mph," he says.

"There's a lot I don't know. I just know I've seen and ridden in a car that runs on compressed air. I know it can be done. Mr. Ngre has proven to the world it can be done.

"If nothing else, I would like to have one just to put in parades and show people it can be done. That would please me immensely. I've always felt somewhere along the line I must be a descendant of P.T. Barnum because I love a good promotion."




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   Next 10 Comments of 12 Total Comments
12.
    Posted by Getoverit May 9, 2008
Sure stubborn believe what you want. I think that he is a good person and I also think that people who can only see the negative side of things are pathetic.

11.
    Posted by stubbornasamule May 9, 2008
"Mr. Davenport is full of himself and only out for attention. For someone who is so full of himself how come he spent money from his own pocket at Christmas time to buy children of frankfort bikes and helmets for them? He didn't put his name on them and the only people that know that he did this were the people that were there."
It's called a tax write off for 2007. A lot of people do that.

10.
    Posted by Getoverit May 8, 2008
CORRECTION: really craves attention there. Sorry typo.

9.
    Posted by Getoverit May 8, 2008
'stubbornasamule' although you seem to think that Mr. Davenport is full of himself and only out for attention. For someone who is so full of himself how come he spent money from his own pocket at Christmas time to buy children of frankfort bikes and helmets for them? He didn't put his name on them and the only people that know that he did this were the people that were there. Really sounds like he craves there. Did you ever think that Mr. Davenport would want to put in the Christmas parade to draw attention to the fact that the vehicle is avaible? No all you thought was that he craved the attention. I am almost sure that stones will be thrown at me but personally I think all people have faults including stubborn and Mr. Davenport. However instead of focusing on them sometimes people should try to see the brighter side of things. This vehicle that he has bought will bring attention to the fact that it is out there. And since he has the money to buy it, he would also have the money to have it fixed. Therefore they could work out the kinks before the average joe like me would be able to buy it.

8.
    Posted by stubbornasamule May 8, 2008
"necessary to put a negative twist on something that is very positive? Geez, all Mr. Davenport is trying to do is try out a car that better for the environment. Like "the.fishery" said, maybe it will catch on. That'd be wonderful."

He could have put a very positive spin if he'd left out the part about having it at the Christmas parade. That doesn't have anything to do with the environment it's a way to show off his newest "toy" that he can afford. It will soon go the way of his giant pink pig.
The kids that were working on a similar project were featured in the same issue. He could keep some of that money at home and had one of his many vehicles converted. To me that would have shown that he was truly concerned.

7.
    Posted by a_rena May 8, 2008
Why is it that some people feel it necessary to put a negative twist on something that is very positive? Geez, all Mr. Davenport is trying to do is try out a car that better for the environment. Like "the.fishery" said, maybe it will catch on. That'd be wonderful.

6.
    Posted by DOGG May 7, 2008
Better put an extra compressor in the car that C. Michael Davenport gets.

5.
    Posted by Erdnase May 7, 2008
Car weighs less than 900 pounds? Maybe they can use a big can opener to pull the bodies out after a collision?

Funny how the owner and car will be full of compressed air. . .sort of like a fart. . .

4.
    Posted by wcm May 7, 2008
He should be able to run this car, he has enough hot air in him

3.
    Posted by tsharper May 7, 2008
If you plug the car in..... that requires fossile fuel,if you use electric at all.

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