The Age of the Hyperloop Has Arrived. Well, for the Most Part
Released on 05/11/2016
[Loudspeaker] Four, three, two, one.
[Narrator] You are now one step closer to
riding in a hyperloop.
(cheering, applause)
Hyperloop One just successfully tested
its propulsion system in the Nevada desert.
It's one of several companies racing to realize
the futuristic transportation method.
They all have the same big dreams.
To make neighbors of distant cities,
replace fume-spewing trucks with
planet-friendly freight movement,
and to dodge the massive costs that come
with railroad construction.
This is the first successful use of a custom-made,
full-scale hyperloop component.
The linear induction motors spread over
nearly 200 feet of track fire a test vehicle
up to 120 miles an hour in just a second and a half.
That sled reached 300 miles per hour
before victoriously plowing into a sand brake.
It's an important step but the journey has just begun.
Hyperloop One still has to figure out
how to build the tubes through which its pods will travel,
how to keep those in a near vacuum state
and how to make the pods levitate.
And that's before anyone worries about
how to build and operate a commercial system
without going bankrupt.
It may seem like a pipe dream,
but whichever company cracks the technology first
could genuinely shift the world of transportation,
just like the ship, train, automobile and plane did
all those years ago.
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