San Francisco Chronicle

Hyperloops could be turning corner

Early test shows they might be more than a pipe dream

- By Eric A. Taub

MOAPA, Nev. — Hyperloop technology, which promises to transport people and goods at speeds of up to 600 mph, has long seemed too good to be true. But one company says it has cleared an important step toward its commercial use by moving two of its employees through a test system.

Virgin Hyperloop became the first company to conduct a human test of the technology at its 500meter test track in the desert north of Las Vegas. The two volunteers, wearing casual street clothes, were recently whisked in a pod that was levitated by magnets inside a vacuum tube to 107 mph in 6.25 seconds.

The riders sat in molded seats covered in white vegan leather, housed inside the allwhite carbon fiberclad pod.

While the Gforces on the pod were three times that of an airplane, “it was much smoother than I expected,” said Sara Luchian, 37, one of the test riders and the company’s director of passenger experience. And unlike an airplane, there were no lateral forces that would have caused the pod to sway, she said.

“It felt not that much different than accelerati­ng in a sports car,” said Josh Giegel, 35, the company cofounder and the other volunteer rider.

“This is a step of historical significan­ce,” said Jay Walder, the company’s CEO, pointing to 20 months of planning. “I don’t think you can overstate it. This is a moonshot moment. I have no doubt this will change the world.”

Whether it becomes a giant leap for mankind is still unclear.

Virgin’s test might be as symbolical­ly important as it is crucial to the technology’s ultimate success. While the pod traveled at a much slower speed than what proponents of hyperloops claim the technology is capable of, company officials described it as a safety milestone.

“The No. 1 question I get from investors is, ‘ Is it safe enough to ride?’ ” said Giegel. “We’re everyday people, we’re not astronauts. This shows that it’s safe, and observers can take this back to their investors and interested municipali­ties.”

The test also gives a sense of reality to an otherwise abstract scifilike construct. “You can show the most elegant diagram but at the end of the day what is important is, will people ride it? This is an example of a picture worth a thousand words,” Luchian said.

The modern hyperloop concept was first described in 2012 by Elon Musk, the top executive of SpaceX and Palo Alto’s Tesla. He offered up the idea to anybody who wanted to exploit it, and neither he nor his companies are working on hyperloops.

Virgin Hyperloop, which counts Richard Branson’s Virgin Group as a minority investor, is one of several companies looking to commercial­ize the technology, which they hope will eventually move passengers between cities, and cargo to and from ports.

If it functions as advertised, travel time could be cut significan­tly — a trip from Los Angeles to San Francisco could, for example, take less than an hour.

Walder has intimate knowledge of transporta­tion systems, having served as the head of New York’s Metropolit­an Transporta­tion Authority and Transport for London. Walder claimed that hyperloop technology could be the first new mass transit system in a century.

“The U. S. Interstate Highway System, which began in 1956, cannot be the end of our imaginatio­n in terms of how we move around,” he said. With hyperloop, “we can have a fundamenta­lly different transporta­tion system.”

Unlike trains, which run on fixed schedules, hyperloop pods would function more like smart elevators. Artificial intelligen­ce would adjust destinatio­ns, the number of pods that travel in a convoy and departure times based on demand.

Many experts are skeptical that the technology will live up to its grand promises or be economical­ly viable.

A truck striking the tube could shut the system down, said Carlo Van de Weijer, the general manager of the Netherland­s’ Eindhoven AI Systems Institute. As the system aged, it would require expensive maintenanc­e. Hyperloops also might not be able to transport as many people or goods as its proponents claim, because individual pods would need to slow down to enter spur tracks.

“Every breakthrou­gh starts with a strange idea,” Van de Weijer said. “But not every strange idea is a breakthrou­gh.”

Like highspeed rail systems, hyperloop companies will have to acquire expensive rights of way, said Juan Matute, deputy director of the Institute of Transporta­tion Studies at UCLA.

The tubes that carry hyperloop pods will need to be very straight for highspeed travel, and turns will have to be very wide. Once routes are set, acquiring every needed parcel of land could become a nightmare. “If a route has been picked, there are no alternativ­es,” Matute said. “Airlines do not have this problem.”

Still, some government officials and hyperloop entreprene­urs are determined to pursue the technology. Virgin Hyperloop, which has doubled its workforce to 300 over the past two years and has raised more than $ 400 million, has selected West Virginia as the site for a certificat­ion center and a 6mile test track.

It has several projects in planning stages: a route between Pune and Mumbai in India; another between Jiddah and Riyadh in Saudi Arabia; and one connecting Chicago, Columbus and Pittsburgh.

“We’re highly positive and very intrigued with the possibilit­ies for hyperloop,” said Thea Ewing, a director for the

MidOhio Regional Planning Commission.

The council estimates that over 30 years, a hyperloop connecting those cities would displace 1.9 billion car and truck trips, reduce carbon emissions by 2.4 million tons and generate $ 300 billion in economic benefits.

Hyperloop Transporta­tion Technologi­es, a company based in Los Angeles and Dubai, has built a 320meter test track in Toulouse, France, and is designing a 1,000meter test track for Abu Dhabi in the United Arab Emirates. It has also formed a partnershi­p with a container operator at the port of Hamburg to design a system to move cargo.

The ability to move people safely at this stage of the technology’s developmen­t is not that important, said the company’s chief executive, Andres de Leon. “We’re testing the program from an engineer’s point of view, not from that of a marketer’s.”

In the Netherland­s, Hardt, a 35employee hyperloop company, has built a 30meter track that lets the company test its levitation, propulsion and laneswitch­ing technologi­es. The company has teamed up with Schiphol Airport in Amsterdam to research the feasibilit­y of a hyperloop linking major airports in the Netherland­s, France, Germany, Belgium and Britain.

But it’s the movement of cargo that Hardt is developing first. “It’s less risky and it’s easier for stakeholde­rs if we don’t emphasize passengers,” said the company’s chief commercial officer, Mars Geuze. “It’s easier to take the smaller steps.”

Two other companies, TransPod in Toronto and Zeleros in Valencia, Spain, are also working to develop hyperloop systems.

Hyperloop companies have been encouraged by government findings that the technology is feasible. In 2019, the U. S. Department of Transporta­tion put the Federal Railroad Administra­tion in charge of developing standards and regulation­s for hyperloops.

In Europe, several hyperloop companies have created a technical committee to develop standards, which they hope will be adopted by the European Union.

After Giegel and Luchian entered the capsule, it was pushed into a decompress­ion chamber to await the creation of a vacuum. At that point, the gate valve opened and the pod entered the tube, ready for the test.

Virgin’s successful human tests could give true believers in the technology a psychologi­cal boost. The company’s executives believe that the system will be commercial­ized by the end of the decade.

“This technology could be the transition to the future we all want,” Giegel said. “Today we went from infancy to adolescenc­e.”

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 ?? Photos by Bridget Bennett / New York Times ?? Above: The test track for a hyperloop pod in Moapa, Nev. Hyperloop technology, which promises to transport people and goods very quickly, has moved a little closer to reality. Below: The inside of the pod.
Photos by Bridget Bennett / New York Times Above: The test track for a hyperloop pod in Moapa, Nev. Hyperloop technology, which promises to transport people and goods very quickly, has moved a little closer to reality. Below: The inside of the pod.
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 ?? Photos by Bridget Bennett / New York Times ?? Above: Josh Giegel and Sara Luchian ride in a hyperloop pod during the first test run in Moapa, Nev. Below: The exterior of the pod, which can transport people and goods quickly.
Photos by Bridget Bennett / New York Times Above: Josh Giegel and Sara Luchian ride in a hyperloop pod during the first test run in Moapa, Nev. Below: The exterior of the pod, which can transport people and goods quickly.

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