As always, we build a race version of our vehicles to prove the concept. If we can build a vehicle, for instance, that can do well at the 24 Hours of Nürburgring, we can turn it into a wonderful sportscar, as we have with our SCG 04. And so, we learned from racing how to make great road cars. And the same thing is true of the Boot. In the case of the conventionally powered Boot, which won in class twice in a row at the Baja 1000, we had a road-legal two and four-door version of that vehicle, and everything we’ve learned from racing the Baja has gone into that. Now that we’re moving into hydrogen fuel cell vehicles, we are beginning with a hydrogen fuel cell race version of our Boot. But a vehicle that can compete and finish at the Baja 1000 is frankly a different vehicle than you’d need on the road. The fuel efficiency of a vehicle at the Baja uses a lot more fuel than a road one, for instance. In the Baja we think it will take almost six times as much hydrogen to race as it would to go 1,000 miles in our road-going pick-up truck. So, they’re different vehicles, but the race version will prove the viability of the road one.
![Jim, can you tell us the reason behind building a hydrogen Boot?](https://d23zpyj32c5wn3.cloudfront.net/images/masonry_bricks/pictures/66557/big/2018_10_21_SCG_Test_garage_0353m.jpg?1643290024)