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Transportation China Government Technology

South Korea Developing 'Near-Supersonic' Train Similar To Hyperloop (huffingtonpost.co.uk) 122

The South Korean government plans to unveil a high-speed train that can travel at near-supersonic speeds capable of cutting a five hour journey to just 30 minutes. It's reminiscent of the Hyperloop, a proposed mode of passenger and freight transportation that propels a pod-like vehicle through a near-vacuum tube at more than airline speed. Huffington Post UK reports: According to the Korea Railroad Research Institute, it plans to unveil a "hyper tube" format train in the "not too distant" future. Speaking to the South China Morning Post, the government-owned organization said: "We hope to create an ultra-fast train, which will travel inside a state-of-the-art low-pressure tube at lightning speeds, in the not-too-distant future. To that end, we will cooperate with associated institutes as well as Hanyang University to check the viability of various related technologies called the hyper-tube format over the next three years." While this sounds very similar to the low-pressure concept designed initially by Tesla founder Elon Musk it seems as though the KRRI wants to go even further and create a system that will leave Hyperloop looking like a Hornby set. By throwing all their resources at the project, South Korea is hoping to skip past maglev, a still-new propulsion system that uses electromagnets to actually levitate trains above the air. While this removes some of the friction that comes with using conventional wheels, it still doesn't remove the brick wall of friction that is air itself. By building a low-pressure tube however and placing the train inside it you can effectively create a train that could travel at eye-watering speeds.
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South Korea Developing 'Near-Supersonic' Train Similar To Hyperloop

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  • by elrous0 ( 869638 ) on Monday January 23, 2017 @08:44PM (#53725619)

    Glorious Leader invent train that go light speed. ALL HAIL GLORIOUS LEADER!

  • The train could be designed to get some lift from that low-pressure air, taking some of the load off the wheels.
    • by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Monday January 23, 2017 @09:00PM (#53725711)

      The train could be designed to get some lift from that low-pressure air, taking some of the load off the wheels.

      That is exactly how Hyperloop works. It uses maglev at low speed, and then uses Air Bearings [wikipedia.org] as it speeds up. There are no wheels.

      • by Rei ( 128717 )

        Wheels at low speed, not maglev.

        Of course, the "Hyperloop competition" blurred the line as to what counts as "hyperloop" anymore, because it was based around a bunch of purely maglev options that were radically different from the Hyperloop Alpha design (in many ways beyond just the levitation means).

        • by Anonymous Coward

          Incidentally, Inductrack [wikipedia.org] also uses wheels for low speed landings. Not sure about the other options, but HTT [wikipedia.org] did base their "Hyperloop" design on Inductrack. Vacuum trains and maglev are not mutually exclusive, and the simplicity and passive levitation afforded by Inductrack make it very attractive even without a vacuum.

          The original Hyperloop design isn't a clear win, as complexity and maintenance costs will be substantially greater with all the turbomachinery on every train. On the other hand, Inductrack

          • by Rei ( 128717 )

            Inductrac is less efficient than air bearings and the track is more complicated to build than straight pipe. That said, if the air bearing concept proved unworkable, I'd think it a fine fallback alternative.

            The costs of the turbomachinery on the current design is factored into the budgeting. And you need it either way unless you're planning to run a hard vacuum, since otherwise the vehicle will compress the column of air ahead of it. Industrial air compressors aren't exactly new technology, although the

      • by louzer ( 1006689 )
        This is what will happen to a Hyperloop or any other vacuum/low-pressure assisted transport: https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
  • by manu0601 ( 2221348 ) on Monday January 23, 2017 @09:04PM (#53725733)
    It is surprising the project comes from a nation with a relatively small territory: the benefits are much smaller than if it happened in for instance Russia, China, or USA.
    • I'm not sure maintaining such low pressure all the way down the tube is feasible even for LA-San Francisco, let alone interstate distances.

      • by Rei ( 128717 )

        Why?

        Part of the whole point of Hyperloop is that the low pressures aren't extreme (it's not a hard vacuum), and are thus easier to maintain with a regular series of vacuum pumps. And it has no "joints" (the only interruptions being periodic emergency exits, and the pumps themselves). All of the pipe segments are orbital welded and then polished smooth.

        • by Anonymous Coward

          And how do you account for thermal expansion without expansion joints dumbass?

          • by Rei ( 128717 )

            What is so difficult for you about reading the design document, "dumbass"? Did you really think that that isn't covered? Section "Earthquakes and Expansion Joints". The tube is not firmly affixed to each pylon; it's mounted on a multiaxis damper. Its positioning is automatically controlled relative to independent factors, including earthquakes, ground shifting over time, and daily thermal expansion (which results in planned for anticipated changes in bend radii as well as a net overall expansion or cont

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          I'm still not convinced it will be any better than maglev though. The main problem is that the cars need to be relatively small to work, meaning low capacity for passengers and cargo. You get 25% more speed but vastly lower capacity, and a huge increase in cost. Compared to a simple walk on, sit down train the proposed Hyperloop cars look like they would take longer to load up too, and be less comfortable when travelling longer distances.

          Japan's maglev system is proven technology, already at the low end of

          • by Rei ( 128717 )

            A more detailed breakdown of the differences versus high speed rail in general is in this post [slashdot.org].

            As for versus maglev: maglev is even more expensive to construct than conventional high speed rail, and suffers from the same design challenges that Hyperloop is designed to eliminate. Beyond that, Hyperloop is entirely self-powering - it uses so little power (coasting the vast majority of the time) that it's easy to have enough solar panels atop the tube to provide for its energy needs. Anything not in a rarifi

          • by hey! ( 33014 )

            Japan's maglev system is proven technology, already at the low end of the Hyperloop speed range and projected to reach over 900km/h in time. Hyperloop is expected to hit around 1200km/h, so I just can't see the benefit being great enough to outweigh the disadvantages.

            The reason to choose Hyperloop over Maglev isn't speed, it's projected cost. Musk thinks he can build the things for $11 million/km. That's about a quarter of what maglev would cost -- assuming that Hyperloop even works.

            There isn't a lot to choose between 30 minutes LA to San Francisco and 45 minutes. Over longer haul routes the technology is supposed to eventually go much, much faster than maglev, but the key in the near future will be to beat maglev on cost over medium distances. And to actually work.

            As

            • by Rei ( 128717 )

              Technically you can scale Hyperloop to several times higher speeds, if you can build sufficiently straight segments (e.g. Great Plains). It does however require one alteration of note: you have to increase your leak compensation pumping capacity severalfold (it's an unknown at this point how bad leaks will be, though they tried to be pessimistic in their assumptions), while injecting hydrogen or helium to maintain the same pressure. Ideally hydrogen (it's not explosive nor embrittling at such tiny pressur

            • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

              It seems extremely unlikely that maglev would cost more than a hyperloop tube. The tube still needs the same support under it, maybe a little less due to smaller cars but a little more due to the mass of the "track" being higher. It's more material to fully enclose the area, and would need air pumps all along it to create the partial vacuum.

              Maglev may ultimately be faster too. The problem with hyperloop is that you have to balance the need to fly on air bearings and the need to shift air out of your way in

              • by Rei ( 128717 )

                Peak loadings from the tube are significantly lower than from the cars (I've done the math, feel free to double check for yourself). And a Hyperloop car weighs about an order of magnitude less than a train. The peak loadings are vastly lower.

                The amount of track steel per unit length isn't that great; if you were just buying raw steel the cost would be something like a fifth of what's being budgeted for buying the pipe segments for the tube. Rail isn't expensive because steel is expensive; it's way, way do

            • by jandrese ( 485 )
              Musk's cost estimates are also pure fantasy. $11 million/km for an elevated human rated pressure vessel? That's not even close to reasonable.
              • by hey! ( 33014 )

                If I were picking a number out of thin air I'd certainly go higher. The question is how he arrived at that number, and I suspect economies of scale have something to do with it. Scale can do funny things to your calculations. Things can get harder, then easier, then harder again as you go up.

                I once had a colleague whose first engineering job out of college was to do a reverse engineering specification on a prototype submersible; the Navy was pleased with the low cost of the prototype and thought it might

                • by Rei ( 128717 )

                  It's not "picking numbers". For god's sake, why does everyone see fit to argue about a system without having read the design document for said system? All of the cost breakdowns are there. It's not that long of a read. It's fine to disagree with something when you know what it actually is you're disagreeing with, but it's ridiculous to assert that something is wrong when you don't even know what that thing is.

              • by Rei ( 128717 )

                What about the cost breakdown do you find unrealistic? Name a particular element.

                I've actually checked a lot of the numbers personally, and every last one I've looked into checks out.

      • I'm not sure maintaining such low pressure all the way down the tube is feasible even for LA-San Francisco, let alone interstate distances.

        It's not feasible.

        The whole hyperloop thing is a circle-jerking load of bullshit that will never be built. Maintaining any significant vacuum in such enormous spaces is extremely difficult. Mark my words, it's pie-in-the-sky bullshit and it will never go into production, nor will it ever be used in any practical manner (especially not for transporting people).

    • Re:Distances (Score:5, Informative)

      by Solandri ( 704621 ) on Monday January 23, 2017 @11:19PM (#53726261)
      Keep in mind this is a country with 2.5x the population of New York state squashed into an area about 2/3 the size of New York state. Of countries larger than 10,000 km^2, only Bangladesh, Taiwan, and Lebanon are more densely populated. The highway system is easily overburdened. During the lunar new year, when nearly everyone tries to travel to their home town, it's not unusual for an approx 400 km drive to take 24 hours.

      I've traveled between Seoul and Busan by highway, regular train, and airliner. The highway takes way too long when there's traffic. Train is slower than car because of all the stops. Air travel is way too expensive and annoying (flight is 40 minutes, about same as NYC to DC, but takes about 2.5 hours due to time tied up at and getting to the airport). The country badly needs something in-between. They started a high speed rail service [wikipedia.org], so this is just a natural progression of what they're already building.
      • by jandrese ( 485 )
        They have never heard of express trains? That's the typical solution to having too many small stops on a rail line.
    • It is surprising the project comes from a nation with a relatively small territory: the benefits are much smaller than if it happened in for instance Russia, China, or USA.

      It's not just that it's a small country. It's a small country with essentially one destination - 20% of the population lives in the capital (and 50% in the capital's metro area). Also, the capital is the government, financial, commercial, industrial, educational, entertainments, etc... etc... hub of the entire country. (Also very much

    • It is surprising the project comes from a nation with a relatively small territory: the benefits are much smaller than if it happened in for instance Russia, China, or USA.

      How about selling expertise, technology, components and whatnot?

    • Or India?
  • I think it's great that one day we'll live on a planet where we don't have to sit in a plane but instead can sit in a train, although I'm sure TSA will find a way to make it slower and more annoying. However, the original article really quotes some... HYPERBOLE ideas:

    "...leave the hyperloop looking like a Hornby set."

    Never heard of it. When using a simile try to ensure that the part you're comparing things to is actually known by people. With all due respect to Bruce Hornsby, of whom I have heard. He's

    • by Anonymous Coward

      It is still new... to the Koreans. While Germany's Siemens group has built Shanghai's maglev from Pudong airport to Shanghai (traveling at 431 kph), South Korea has built a slow and short maglev that runs near their airport. Delayed for years, as they figured out how to make it work, this was supposed to be their technology demonstrator for sales to other countries. Last time I checked, nobody is building a maglev anytime soon. This new hyperloop competitor will be another waste of taxpayer's money.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        Japan started construction last year on their maglev between Tokyo and Nagoya, due 2027. Wholly financed privately by JR. Most sections will be underground. Tunnels generate too much noise.

    • by gl4ss ( 559668 )

      it's there because james may is obsessed with them.

      anyways.. they're toy trains popular in the UK when toy trains became popular.

    • we don't have to sit in a plane but instead can sit in a train

      So instead of sitting in a sealed container traveling through the air at 500 MPH, you will sit in a sealed container traveling through a tunnel at 500 MPH?

      It doesn't seem like there are any benefits over air travel. Though there are many disadvantages. The biggest and most obvious is the lack of flexibility. You have to bore the tunnel and it only goes from one fixed point to another. The cost is enormous and the infrastructure is inflexible (literally and figuratively). Apart from that, tunnels need main

      • by Rei ( 128717 )

        If you think the pressure maintenance figures in the Hyperloop Alpha document are unreasonable, cite the actual numbers you disagree with and explain why.

        The main advantages over air travel are that the pressure is much lower, frontal area much lower, allowable spacings far closer (no "air traffic"), no noise pollution, no air pollution, and efficient, direct acceleration of the vehicles, with the tube itself serving as a mounting point for the solar panels that power it.

        You clearly have never read the Hype

      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
        • by Rei ( 128717 )

          This is the standard way people complain about Hyperloop.

          Step 1) Don't ever bother actually reading the design document, despite the fact that it's not that long and addressess the vast majority of arguments

          Step 2) Compare Hyperloop to something not even remotely comparable to it, like the costs of building viaducts for an order of magnitude higher peak loadings, building tunnels with an order of magnitude or more greater cross section, acquiring orders of magnitude more private land, and comparing costs fo

    • Never heard of Hornby? I'm not a toy train fan but I'd be surprised if almost everyone didn't know who Hornby is? I don't play with dolls but I've heard of Barbie. You don't have to play with cars to know who Hotwheels and Matchbox are.

  • to do with all those Galaxy Note 7 batteries.
    • by gijoel ( 628142 )
      What? Are they burning them as fuel for their steam locomotives?
      • Use as high explosives to bore through the tunnel. With the tens of millions of note 7's apparently they could built a tunnel linking south korea to china via north korea and have some to spare.
  • " . . . the brick wall of friction that is air itself. By building a low-pressure tube . . . could travel at eye-watering speeds."

    Funny choice of words, since it's the air itself which causes your eyes to water at high speeds.
  • A lot easier target than an airplane. You could be miles away when the bomb goes off.

    • by Rei ( 128717 )

      If you're going to detonate bombs large enough to take out a concrete column for a big steel pipe, why wouldn't you do it where you'd kill a lot more people rather than "hopefully lucking into causing enough deflection (by increasing the span) right before the next capsule arrives that it can't decelerate sufficiently in time to handle said deflection, and possibly killing or injuring one capsule's worth of people"?

      Airplane attacks were popular because of the ability to kill hundreds of people at once, or t

    • A lot less devastating than an airplane though. If the bomb doesn't kill you itself, you're much more likely to survive. The train is less likely to hit a building or other people, and there would be less of a psychological impact.

  • by RubberDogBone ( 851604 ) on Tuesday January 24, 2017 @01:24AM (#53726643)

    Various Korean rail companies have supplied trains around the world and nobody doubts they make a lot of rolling stock.

    But many of the Korean-built mass transit and passenger trains seem to suffer extreme defects and lawsuits. Boston MBTA, Philadelphia SEPTA and California Metrolink are all suing Hyundai Rotem over different issues with their rail vehicles. Rail lines in Australia are also engaged in lawsuits.

    Now, problems and disagreements happen with rail. But there is a big pattern of Korean rail suppliers overpromising what they can do, underbidding competitors, and then either failing to deliver on time or delivering equipment with massive faults and defects.

    It seems to be mainly a case of trying to bag contracts before Chinese or Japanese suppliers can get them, even if the Korean companies can't really deliver. This is what happens when all these municipal rail systems have very star-eyed visions of what they want and pocket change to pay for it, so they go for the biggest dreamer and low bidder all at once with a very optimistic timetable. And it just can't work that way.

    So here is KRRI promising the unproven and yet to be invented faster than anyone else AND for the best price. Yeah goody for you. Somebody will fund it.

    Disclaimer: Aside from the US, there is no nation I love more than South Korea. It's in my blood. I proudly own a Korean car and go nuts over Korean pop culture. But there have been just so many rail issues. It really sullies the Korean reputation.

  • BTW if you are in Vegas, drive up to the Apex Solar Plant, and you will easily see the Hyperloop One test track [thisisinsider.com].

  • This is what happens to low-pressure tubes: https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
  • For, if it is, this will be the hottest product of the year.
  • Paraphrased, this train can travel "almost more than" the speed of sound. So... does it travel at exactly Mach 1, or slightly slower?
  • While this sounds very similar to the low-pressure concept designed initially by Tesla founder Elon Musk

    Some of us know how to read books. This idea wasn't exactly new when Elon Musk was born!

    See, for example, The Reefs of Space, Frederik Pohl and Jack Williamson, 1964.

    • by Rei ( 128717 )

      ... which did not involve anything remotely similar to Hyperloop.

      Please learn how Hyperloop actually works before insisting that something else is the same. (hint: google "Hyperloop Alpha" and read the design document; it won't take all day). Hyperloop Alpha is neither maglev nor a vactrain; it's basically an extreme version of a ground-effect aircraft flying through a rarified atmosphere, using a compressor to prevent the buildup of a column of air ahead of it by shunting it to the air bearings and behin

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