Regardless of whether suspended by maglev or wheels, higher speeds require either super-straight routes or tilting trains. The former are difficult in a densely populated county like the UK, and I haven't heard of maglev doing the latter.
Regardless of whether suspended by maglev or wheels, higher speeds require either super-straight routes or tilting trains. The former are difficult in a densely populated county like the UK, and I haven't heard of maglev doing the latter.
Once somebody invents a cheap, room-temperature super-conducting material or cheap nuclear fusion, only then will maglev become mainstream for mass transport. Until then, it's pretty cool but more of a gimmick than an energy efficient solution, I think.
Maglev can do superelevation to an extent that conventional rail can't even dream of (it can roll over to a far greater extent).
I believe routes for 360kph conventional rail and 500kph maglev come out as comparable.
Once you use grid electricity it becomes essentially irrelevent compared to capital costs of the infrastructure.
Is this by tilting the train via the magnets or simply by canting the track? If the latter, the amount may be limited by comfort issues should a train have to stop on the superelevated section.
Is this by tilting the train via the magnets or simply by canting the track? If the latter, the amount may be limited by comfort issues should a train have to stop on the superelevated section.
In theory (grossly oversimplified theory - I know very little about maglev practice) I suppose you could have a train suspended below a circular-section beam, then each train would passively tilt by the right amount for its speed.
Among the types of problem I can imagine, one is avoiding hitting the beam supports.
Perhaps the beam could be supported magnetically...
Yeah, it leaves you stuck in Pudong on the wrong side of the river from the centre, from which you have to take a cab or the metro. It's a gimmick from the new Pudong airport, it's quite fun to take, but as soon as the train reaches 400km/hr it has to slow down.The operational maglev route is in Shanghai, it supposedly connects the centre of the city to the airport but does no such thing because that would be too expensive.
Even more amusing when you consider the "Father of Maglev" was British.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eric_Laithwaite
Maglev is a good idea but I can't see it catching on
You might say it has lost it's attraction.
TAXI for Mr Rick!!!
Supersonic passenger aircraft were stopped from going mainstream by the fact that energy in the form of liquid fuels is expensive.
Energy in the form of electricity is extremely cheap by comparison, meaning that running faster is more feasible as the costs of doing so are lower.
So what you're saying is if we can find a way of making planes run on grid electricity we're sorted![]()
Wasn't it only two track when converted to conventional running (2003 according to Wikipedia)?
I see the Japanese Maglev has slipped to 2045 now... I get the feeling it's not going to be built...
Yeah, it leaves you stuck in Pudong on the wrong side of the river from the centre, from which you have to take a cab or the metro. It's a gimmick from the new Pudong airport, it's quite fun to take, but as soon as the train reaches 400km/hr it has to slow down.
Some of us here even question the value of HS2, given that 140mph is possible on existing lines, and the main arguments for it have to do with capacity, not speed. Rail outcompetes car and plane for journey times in the 100-300 mile zone and beyond that (e.g London - Scotland) the market is small compared to investment costs, and air will certainly be far cheaper than maglev as well as more flexible.
.....I can still remember sonic booms over the Westcountry.....