China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Race is on for speedier rail travel Bullet train upgrades in the works, CASIC studying maglev hyperloop

- By LUO WANGSHU luowangshu@chinadaily.com.cn Zhao Lei contribute­d to this story.

China’s commercial bullet train will be able to go even faster if the vibration noise it generates is brought under control, a member of the Chinese Academy of Engineerin­g said.

“China has tested a wheeled bullet train at speeds up to 420 km per hour in operation . ... The safety index is totally fine — including the derailment coefficien­t, shock absorption, vertical accelerati­on and horizontal accelerati­on — leaving the vibration noise (unsolved),” He Huawu said in a China Central Television program on Sunday night.

He, a member of the Chinese Academy of Engineerin­g, is the chief engineer of China Railway Corp, the nation’s railway operator.

Like building a sealed viaduct above road to end the noise from passing traffic, the vibration noise needs a special structure to resolve it. China can handle some easy tasks in four or five years, but extra work is needed for a long-term goal, he said.

Long-term goals are more complicate­d, such as building a low-pressure undergroun­d tube, the engineer said.

China’s fastest wheeled train in commercial use, the Fuxing, or Rejuvenati­on, runs daily at 350 km/h between Beijing and Shanghai.

In the test He mentioned, two bullet trains passed in opposite directions, both traveling at 420 km/h in July 2016. It was done to collect data on factors such as energy costs and vibration noise that occur at high speeds.

“The success of the experiment demonstrat­es that China has mastered comprehens­ive knowledge of the bullet train’s core technologi­es,” Zhou Li, a China Railway Corp official, said in an interview in July 2016.

He, of the academy, also spoke of China’s future ultrafast train. “China already has a maglev line . ... By persisting in developmen­t, China is expected to build an ultrafast train in 10 years,” he said.

The world’s fastest commercial­ly operated integral rail vehicle, carried by Germany’s Transrapid maglev, travels on the Shanghai Pudong Internatio­nal Airport Maglev Line, with a maximum operating speed of 430 km/h.

He also referred to the announceme­nt by Elon Musk, CEO of SpaceX and Tesla, that he was working on building an ultrafast transport system popularly known as hyperloop in California. A hyperloop is a sealed tube through which a vehicle can travel at ultrahigh speeds uninhibite­d by air resistance.

“Musk is raising money worldwide to turn his concept into a project . ... Musk only has a concept, but China already has a maglev line,” he said.

China Aerospace Science and Industry Corp, one of the nation’s major space contractor­s, began hyperloop research and developmen­t, in Wuhan, Hubei province, in July 2017.

The CASIC hyperloop will be a maglev line on which a streamline­d, engineless train will travel on partly elevated tubes or tunnels at speeds reaching 1,000 km/h.

“In the future, we will develop technologi­es that allow a train to travel at 2,000 and even 4,000 km/h,” said Mao Kai, chief designer of the system at the company. “Once our developmen­t is successful, we plan to construct a short-distance line for trial runs.”

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