Ottawa Citizen

ON TRACK FOR FAST

Aiming for jet speed on land

- BRIAN FUNG

Engineers working for Hyperloop One have just tested a key technology that could someday help us travel as fast on the ground as airliners do in the air.

At a sneak peek in the Las Vegas desert Wednesday, Hyperloop One showed off a newly designed electric motor that’s capable of propelling a sled down a track for hundreds of feet

It’s one of the key technologi­es that could eventually power the Hyperloop, a high-speed transporta­tion concept initially devised by Elon Musk. Proponents say the futuristic technology could ferry passengers or cargo at hundreds of miles an hour, covering the distance between San Francisco and Los Angeles in about half an hour, whereas it would normally take about six hours by car. And it could revolution­ize the economy, enabling faster shipment of goods and cutting long commutes short.

If you’re unfamiliar with the concept, it goes like this: Someday, you might be able to step into a kind of subway car that levitates on a small cushion of air. Then, when the car closes, all or most of the other air is taken out of the tunnel, reducing the drag and friction that would otherwise build up in front of the car, slowing you down as it travelled.

One of the most important parts of this notional machine is the electric motor that sucks excess air from the front of the car and transfers it to the rear.

According to Hyperloop Tech chief executive Rob Lloyd, the motor was custom-designed and tailored specifical­ly for the project.

“The amount of energy it uses, the way we control the pulses, the copper coils, everything is unique,” Lloyd said in an interview. “There’s no other motor in the world that uses this amount of energy in an instant fashion, turning it on and turning it off.”

Of course, the real Hyperloop won’t have tracks at all. But as a proof of concept, Hyperloop Tech says the demo represents a taste of what’s to come.

“This is a full-scale component. This is the technology,” Lloyd said.

Hyperloop Tech is one of several companies trying to build the first functional Hyperloop. For instance, it’s in a race against Hyperloop Transporta­tion Technologi­es, which is doing its testing in California and on Monday unveiled its “passive levitation” technology, which allows the transporta­tion pod to float only while it’s moving, theoretica­lly improving safety. (Hyperloop Tech runs its test bed in Nevada). Conceding that the two companies are often confused for each other, Lloyd said that his firm will now be known as Hyperloop One.

Hyperloop One said that GE Ventures, the venture capital arm of General Electric, will become an investor. Also investing is SNCF, France’s state-owned rail company, which wants to study Hyperloop technology for applicatio­ns in Europe.

“I anticipate building many Hyperloops in Europe,” Lloyd said.

First, the company will have to pass its biggest test yet: producing a fully functionin­g demo by the end of the year that includes not just the motor, but also the tubes, levitation and the car that travels inside it.

No pressure. Literally.

 ??  ??
 ?? PHOTOS: DAVID BECKER/GETTY IMAGES ?? An onlooker snaps a closeup of a demonstrat­ion test sled after the first test of the propulsion system at the Hyperloop One Test and Safety site in North Las Vegas. The company plans to create a fully operationa­l hyperloop system by 2020.
PHOTOS: DAVID BECKER/GETTY IMAGES An onlooker snaps a closeup of a demonstrat­ion test sled after the first test of the propulsion system at the Hyperloop One Test and Safety site in North Las Vegas. The company plans to create a fully operationa­l hyperloop system by 2020.
 ??  ?? In the Hyperloop concept, a kind of subway car moves through a tube that has removed most or all of the air that would normally slow it down.
In the Hyperloop concept, a kind of subway car moves through a tube that has removed most or all of the air that would normally slow it down.
 ??  ?? Rob Lloyd
Rob Lloyd

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada