hyperloop

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Madsapper

Bronze Knight of the Realm
147
14
no more trucking industry, trains etc. fuel savings could be amazing. Pulling all transport trucks off the road would go a long way to ease congestion.
Even with the rate the world is advancing technology wise I don't think this will be possible within the next 4-5 generations. The infrastructure needed and how/where to build it without impeding current distribution is mind-bottling.

Not going to tackle the tube to Asia, neat idea but there are three tectonic plates moving in three different directions between Asia and the west coast. Two if you go through Japan.

Trains, not going to happen for a long damn time, even with a hyperloop track next to every set of train tracks in the country...you would still need the hyperloop equivalent of a train yard in EVERY location that currently has a train yard and the space to build them. If you've never seen a large train yard hit up google. While you're there, google the number of miles of train track in the US. That will give a rough idea of the infrastructure mileage needed just for freight.

Trucks, even with trains weaseling in on the long haul side of the trucking industry in the last couple years the amount of freight moved by trucks is staggering.

Example:http://corporate.walmart.com/our-sto...ores/logistics

158 distribution centers in the US-each one supports 90-100 stores in a 200 mile radius-the one in northern Florida has 400+ doors to load and unload.

7000 drivers averaging 100,000 miles a year. 700 million miles.....just for their fleet. The majority of these miles are distribution center to store, other trucking companies bring most of the goods into the centers.

Another truck issue is the 9 to 5 day-cab drivers (no sleeper box behind the driver). These drivers don't run a log book since they only run in a 150 mile radius from "work". If you can design an unobtrusive hyperloop like system to cover what these drivers do locally you win the world.

Long story short, the amount of freight moved is directly tied to the size of the population so the quickest way to have less trucks and trains is to tell everyone you meet to stop fucking.
 

Draegan_sl

2 Minutes Hate
10,034
3
A rigid tube across the Pacific Ocean would be impossible. It would have to be very flexible like a cable line.
 

Loser Araysar

Chief Russia Reporter. Stock Pals CEO. Head of AI.
<Gold Donor>
80,117
160,215
Even if they build the thing cheaply and it does everything as advertised its still going to be just a novelty. Imagine you live in la and get a job in frisco. You cant use the hyperloop to get to work reliably every day. Imagine the waiting list to use the damned thing. Besides once you get to your destination you still gotta take a bus near your place of business.
A lot of companies in major metropolitan areas offer shuttle service from main transportation hubs to your place of employment.


Anyways, here's something more practical that still allows door to door transportation (not hub to hub), extremely energy efficient and just might be the the future of personal transportation.

Electric roads to the Hyperloop: Our Jetsons future starts now
As we geek out over the Hyperloop, a South Korean city launches something amazing: A road that can charge vehicles
BY HENRY GRABAR
 

Palum

what Suineg set it to
26,457
41,107
So Musk basically said someone should build a giant tube system like they have at banks without putting any real engineering expertise or investments into it and everyone is creaming their pants now? Or did I miss something more exciting...