China Daily (Hong Kong)

China seeks the ultimate high-speed train

-

News that Chinese scientists are conducting research in the hope of developing a maglev train that would reach speeds of up to 2,000 kilometers per hour as it rockets through an underwater tube made my jaw drop — until I realized that man’s constant search for speed isn’t that new.

Close to where I live in southeast London lie Sydenham Woods, the last trace of the Great South Wood that covered most of the Home counties around London in medieval times.

Hidden among the undergrowt­h are the remains of an extraordin­ary experiment by an enterprisi­ng railway engineer and inventor called Thomas Webster Rammell.

In 1864, dissatisfi­ed with the slow, messy and dirty business of early steam trains, he came up with the idea of a pneumatic-powered train that would shoot pas-

This Day, That Year

ItemfromMa­y25,1991,in ChinaDaily:Propertyhu­nterslookf­orhomesatt­he 10thHousin­gExchangeF­air attheWorki­ngPeople’sCulturalP­alaceinBei­jing.Most weresearch­ingforhome­s closertowh­eretheywor­k.

Following the privatizat­ion of urban housing in the 1990s, realtors have played an important role in China’s sengers in an open carriage from A to B via a sealed, relatively air-tight tunnel.

So far, so good. He’d already experiment­ed with a pneumatic railway for the London Pneumatic Despatch Co to convey letters in vacuum-driven wagons.

What doesn’t seem to have been taken into account is the effect of such a ride on human passengers.

Consisting of a carriage fitted with a large collar of bristles, the conveyance, with its hapless passengers, was sucked along an airtight tunnel. It operated for a little more than two months, and was believed to be a demonstrat­ion line for a more permanent link between Waterloo on the south bank of the River Thames and the government buildings in central London’s Whitehall.

Constructi­on was started, but never finished. To this day, locals talk of people with ruptured eardrums and rumors abound of ghosts. The sleepers and part of the tunnel exist to this day.

Thus ended that particular attempt at speeding up rapid economic growth.

Last year, the housing sector accounted for 6.5 percent of the country’s GDP, according to the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission.

Soaring demand makes owning a home in big cities such as Beijing and Shanghai difficult for most people.

A series of measures, including purchase limits and tough mortgage rules, transport. Flash forward, if you will, to 1976, when the joint Franco-British supersonic airliner Concorde entered service with British Airways and Air France.

Capable of more than twice the speed of sound, at Mach 2.04 and flying from London to New York in half the time of a convention­al airliner, Concorde was a technologi­cal marvel.

I was lucky enough to fly Concorde twice, and watching the curvature of the Earth’s surface, combined with the slight kick as it tore through the Mach 2 barrier, was awesome.

But economics and fuel prices, as well as environmen­tal concerns and a fatal crash in Paris in July 2000, meant the delta-winged marvel was withdrawn from service in 2003.

If you wanted speed at ground level then, you had to turn to France, where stateowned SNCF introduced in 1981 the Train a Grand Vitesse, or High-Speed Train, capable of moving at up to 570 km/h.

That network now covers have helped cool the market.

Of the 70 cities tracked by the National Bureau of Statistics, 30 saw slower growth in new and pre-owned home prices last month.

In the past 12 months, about 50 cities have introduced tough new home-buying rules, a report from realtor Centaline Property said.

To further stabilize the market, Beijing has most of France’s major cities.

In 2007, China introduced its own high-speed rail system, which is now the most heavily used in the world, with 1.44 billion passengers carried last year. The longest line is 2,298 km, from Guangzhou, Guangdong province, to Beijing.

And, to bring us back to high technology, there is the world’s only maglev line, which is in Shanghai and is capable of hitting 431 km/h.

Maglev means trains gliding above a track by means of magnetic repulsion, and power by a linear motor.

Frankly, the idea of a maglev train powering its way through an underwater tube at a theoretica­l speed of 2,000 km/h seems fantastica­l to me. But if anyone can do it, then Chinese technologi­cal innovation can.

Watch this space.

Contact the writer at chris@ mail.chinadaily­uk.com

Online

Scan the code to hear an audio version.

announced plans to increase land supply, which will be enough for an additional 1.5 million homes.

 ?? WU JUNJIE / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? A dog wearing sunglasses goes out with its owner in Taiyuan, Shanxi province, last week when a heat wave swept across much of North China.
WU JUNJIE / FOR CHINA DAILY A dog wearing sunglasses goes out with its owner in Taiyuan, Shanxi province, last week when a heat wave swept across much of North China.
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China