Whatever happened to Elon Musk’s hyperloop?
It’s hard to believe but this
summer marks ten years since the billionaire inventor first unveiled the idea
for passenger pods riding like maglev trains inside giant tubes in a near
vacuum. So it’s time to see how his
vision of this super-fast transportation system is coming along. Spoiler alert: it’s not doing so great.
First off, Musk was not the
first person to suggest tube-like trains running in a vacuum. As early as 1799 British inventor George
Medhurst came up with the idea, launching his Grand Vacuum Tube
Company. Interesting concept but it
was never built.1800's Illustration of a Hyperloop
Fast forward to August 2013
when Musk unveils his concept, claiming that for just $6B he could build a
hyperloop between LA and San Francisco that could cover the distance in about 32
minutes at about 750 mph.
Musk built a scale model,
mile-long test track at his SpaceX plant in Hawthorne CA (since
removed) and, to his credit, in effect gave away his idea (well, George
Medhurst’s idea) to encourage development.
Richard Branson’s Virgin
Company launched Hyperloop One and even built a test track in Nevada where he
ran a scale model prototype at 240 mph and conducted the first human test run
at 100 mph. But by 2022 the company
pivoted, announcing it was dropping development of passenger service and
focusing instead on just moving freight.
In two rounds of layoffs more than half the staff was let go.
Overseas another company, Hyperloop
TT, is raking in millions in contracts to build a system linking Padua and
Venice. They’ve also secured deals in
Dubai, India and Slovakia but so far there’s been minimal construction. A plan to launch passenger service in Dubai by
2019 was, it seems, just more hyperloop hype.
The one system that Musk’s own
Boring Company (get it… they bore tunnels?) has built was a $52M demonstration
project in, of all places, Las Vegas. In
2021 a less than two mile tunnel connecting both sides of that massive Convention
Center was opened, not with 700+ mph pods but with a fleet of Tesla cars
driving in a tunnel at 40 mph. And yes,
there are sometimes traffic jams in the tunnel… the very thing that Musk
conceived his “loop” would avoid.Vegas "Loop" Tesla-jam
What are the problems with the
hyperloop concept? Many things.
First, maintaining a near
vacuum inside hundreds of miles of tubes is a major challenge if not
impossible.
Second, given the proposed
speeds there’s a question of passenger comfort in the pods, accelerating at supersonic
speeds that would subject riders to 2.4
Gs.
Third, what if there’s a
problem mid-journey? How can you
evacuate passengers from a tube in a near vacuum?
Proponents say that flying is
somewhat similar… sitting in a sealed tube going 300+ mph, albeit in
mid-air. We take that journey for
granted now, so maybe future generations will think the same of hyperloop?
Time, and a lot of expensive
innovation and engineering will answer that question.
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