Here's a video of the winning run in the HyperLoop contest. 201 MPH from the German Team. They went from Zero to 201 MPH and back to Zero in 0.8 miles. Crazy Gs!!!
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z0AlM8ctykQ[/youtube]
Moderator: Soñadora
LarryHoward wrote:As it is, the Acela is much more expensive than the regional service but only 15 minutes faster as it still has multiple (although fewer) stops.
BeauV wrote:One place this tech really makes sense, and a place that the CA state government is targeting with high-speed rail, is between the relatively inexpensive towns of the central valley and the job-rich areas of Silicon Valley. Currently, it's a two-hour drive each way, to travel about 30-40 miles. If Elon could using his Boring company to drill through the hills between Tracey, Fresno, and Stockton and deliver workers to Silicon Valley at 200 MPH the service would be packed.
It appears that building some sort of high-speed interconnect for workers is a LOT less expensive than either building thousands of new housing units (and all their attendant infrastructure) or moving the companies into the central valley (which a lot of the current workers would resist).
LarryHoward wrote:BeauV wrote:One place this tech really makes sense, and a place that the CA state government is targeting with high-speed rail, is between the relatively inexpensive towns of the central valley and the job-rich areas of Silicon Valley. Currently, it's a two-hour drive each way, to travel about 30-40 miles. If Elon could using his Boring company to drill through the hills between Tracey, Fresno, and Stockton and deliver workers to Silicon Valley at 200 MPH the service would be packed.
It appears that building some sort of high-speed interconnect for workers is a LOT less expensive than either building thousands of new housing units (and all their attendant infrastructure) or moving the companies into the central valley (which a lot of the current workers would resist).
Which will all depend on the pricing. If subsidized as infrastructure and priced so that it is a commuter line, then I can see it. If priced as a premium service, not so much.
Then there is that small seismic issue.
LarryHoward wrote:BeauV wrote:One place this tech really makes sense, and a place that the CA state government is targeting with high-speed rail, is between the relatively inexpensive towns of the central valley and the job-rich areas of Silicon Valley. Currently, it's a two-hour drive each way, to travel about 30-40 miles. If Elon could using his Boring company to drill through the hills between Tracey, Fresno, and Stockton and deliver workers to Silicon Valley at 200 MPH the service would be packed.
It appears that building some sort of high-speed interconnect for workers is a LOT less expensive than either building thousands of new housing units (and all their attendant infrastructure) or moving the companies into the central valley (which a lot of the current workers would resist).
Which will all depend on the pricing. If subsidized as infrastructure and priced so that it is a commuter line, then I can see it. If priced as a premium service, not so much.
Then there is that small seismic issue.