Gee, sorry to try and help. But your concept of an airborne fuel production plant is about as whacked as I've ever heard. How are you going to supply motive power for your airplane, and provide enough residual power to supply your fuel production plant as well? That was Greg's point, and you haven't answered it. I pointed out that the dust persists to high altitude in Martian atmosphere, and negates the ONLY justification you have for your aircraft, you don't answer that point. Your idea that flying around is somehow going to reduce the need for cooling fans for the absorber bed are nuts, all that means is you need to add more engine power to overcome the added drag of the flow diverted thru the absorber bed, in addition the the lift and drag performance already required of your aircraft. You claim that my reaction is false information, and yet the H2 that you show reacting with the CO2 comes from where exactly -- that's right, water; and the reaction you would use more economically is the water-gas reaction if you could find some carbon deposits, but let's not discuss that, since you won't be landing, instead you're planning, what, to carry around a blimp full of H2 that you brought with you or something? You claim a polar lander is a dumb idea, know any other place on Mars that has confirmed water ice deposits? Yes, there is some CO2 in solid form there too, hey - why do you need an absorber if you can just shovel in raw dry ice, and let it evaporate to pressurize your system, leaving dust contaminants behind? Do you really propose to power your idea with solar cells, and have you any idea what their potential lifespan is for Martian environment?
I read Zubrin's Case for Mars papers 20+ years ago as a grad student, researching methods to reject waste heat on Mars for fixed nuclear power plants. They are good studies, but were old when I read them. There's better data out there today.
But all you can do is whine that we're not helping you realize your dream of soaring above Mt. Olympus. Go away, kid, ya bother me.