Japan to Launch Maglev Trains by 2025
SpeedyTrain writes with a link to a story on the Mainichi Daily News site about the future of mass transit in Japan. Despite problems with Maglev technology in test-bed scenarios around the world, Japan has committed to building a line between Tokyo and Nagoya by 2025. The experimental system will allow trains to run at up to 310 miles an hour. "The new magnetically levitated, or "maglev," trains would slash the 100-minute travel time down the country's busiest transportation corridor and are envisioned as a successor for Japan's iconic bullet trains, or shinkansen, first introduced to the world in 1964 ... [a] spokeswoman declined to give an estimate for the cost of linking the capital with the Nagoya area about 269 kilometers (168 miles) to the west. But Kyodo News agency said the whole project would cost about 9 trillion yen (US$76.3 billion) and be divided between the company and the central and local governments."
Must have some heavy boosters to be able to do that. Oh wait, it says they use magnets. Wow!
Will the passengers go in a shirtsleeve environment or will they wear spacesuits in their launch chairs?
How many cars will the train have? How many passengers per car? What is the cost for a ticket?
This sound like a great, fun new way to go into space. =)
http://spacemonitor.blogspot.com/2007/03/magnetic
Drill baby drill - on Mars
I think I'd rather have the trains.
These will be launched *unmanned*, then installed on other planetary bodies, *then* used like ordinary maglev trains by people on these planetary bodies. Anyway launching something so heavy is impressive, props to JAXA.
Don't you mean Tokyo U(niversity)? Why would anyone purposely built a train system with a school as terminal station?
Never underestimate the Japanese. If they set a firm goal that is obtainable then watch out. In the past when they set a goal for themselves they usually achieve it. 20 years is plenty of time to get the technology figured out. The interesting thing will be how they pull it off.
Here is another thing to think about. This opens the door for small startup or research groups that could potentially win a contract if they can create a viable working and safe system. If the little guy can do that then there is some money to be made from the technology both there and around the world. By announcing this the get the people who think they can do it better then the others. Think of the chance and getting your technology in place there like the Xprize for space flight.
I would be more surprised if they didn't pull this one off looking back at history.
Procrastinating life a way at a rapid rate of speed.
Thats a huge amount of money to lay a short track. How do they plan to recoup initial costs of $454 Million a mile of track?
Do not try to read the dupe, thats impossible. Instead, only try to realize the truth
What truth?
There is no dupe
That is what you can do with tax payers money when you do not go to war!
Oops I forgot, wars are payed by borrowed money [e.g. the Federal Reserve (Sen. Ron Paul's criticism) prints some extra], but the inflation will catch up in couple of months.
If the commute lowers from two and a half hours to an hour, couldn't workers commute from the fourth largest city to the largest city, meaning it would grow even bigger? Is this a scientific attempt, a transportation time reduction attempt, or an economy boost attempt?
Yawwwwwn.
581 km/hour traveling 269 kilometers makes the trip makes the trip about 28 minuites, not counting speed up time. I'm sure quite a few people could use those 70 minutes per day.
While the article is scarce on technical details, that is an immense sum of money. (Perhaps, in part, due to the landscape?) If the numbers at Wikipedia are correct, it is seven times the cost per unit length of the Shanghai TransRapid track. It would seem unimaginable for an Inductrack system to cost this much though.
So, I have to ask, why? Inductrack is a brilliant design, and would make Maglev's much cheaper and better in just about every way. Inductrack is a completely passive levitation system, which requires no electromagnets or control circuits to maintain stable levitation. You can't buy a finished system today, but the theory is proven, and it would almost certainly be a more sensible investment.
Inductrack is a direct extension of ideas which made possible the passive magnetic bearings in earlier Flywheel Energy Storage systems. Basically, it uses a linear Halbach Array instead of a cylindrical one. Very cool technology, all around.
Bargain... Just like most other transit projects...
Deleted
There is already a short maglev train route in place in japan from the Shanghai airport into the city which started operation in 2004. It runs approxamately 19 miles and completes the trip in an average of seven minutes. The maximum speed normaly is around 280 miles per hour. Seems to be working well so far. more here http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shanghai_Maglev_Train
"and thats all i have to say about THAT" -2 the ranting gryphon
I love riding the MagLev in Shanghai - most of the passengers are usually Japanese tourists, snapping photos of the overhead display as it reads higher and higher speeds until that magic number of 433 - running the length in 7 minutes and 20 seconds. The fun is over much too soon...
The track should be routed via Shizuoka and Nagano so it can double as a high-energy collider. Though probably not at the same time.
The planned route is quite different than the current shinkansen. It would run from Tokyo west to Kofu, through Nagano and Gifu prefectures. Much of the route is mountainous so there would be numerous tunnels. You'll find a proposed route at www.linear-chuo-exp-cpf.gr.jp. The site is in Japanese but even if you can't read Japanese, there are many illustrations.
From Pudon international airport to the center of Shanghai. It's about 30 km and takes 7 min. It is a VERY cool ride. Perfectly balanced you do not feel the G's at all. In the 2 curves it seems to be leaning som 25 degrees but do to the perfecly balanced speed you can not feel it. It is a very strange experience, passing the expresse way and not being able to see what way the cars go because you are soooooo much faster. The chinese are also building MagLev from Shanghai to Hangzhou and down along the southern coast. Several places you can see the carrier-beams and the holes in the mountains already. The trail will go Shanghai, Hangzhou, Nimbo and streight south. http://www.smtdc.com/en/index.asp for more information STDK
Seems to me that a terrorist hit on one of these trains would be much easier than hitting an airliner. At those speeds, a lot of damage could be done. And the terrorist would not even have to kill himself in the process.
Didn't you get MagLevs in TTDx / Transport Tycoon Deluxe [or OpenTTD] in 2020?
All bow to the great prophet, TTD.
Japan doesnt really need any more faster trains. At the rate their population is falling soon even Tokyo will have vacancies at reasonable rents so the need for going further and further out is not really urgent. But India and China with their huge populations and limited land (if you dont count deserts China is actually smaller than India) do need them and in 20 years time when they can afford maglevs on a large scale who are they going to buy from? From those who have working systems in place so this is more of a demo for sales purposes and hence the costs are justified. Pretty much for the same reasons the French and Germans are building fast trains- so they can sell to the Indians and Chinese.
**Life is too short to be serious**
A society planning 20 years into the future ... I thought that was an impossibility due to the human condition.
For 76 *ucking billion, I wanna see mach 5 jet engines on the back of the train in 2 years!
That sounds like a hella lot of waste for nothing, a long time from now!
In 10 years we'll have free energy & in 20, teleportation. 310 miles per hour will sound like walking compared to flying an F18 with the technology they'll have in 2025.
Adeptus
No trees were killed in the making of this post; however, many trillions of electrons were horribly inconvenienced.
I grew up in Japan in the 1970s, and I had picture books that talked about how maglev trains would connect Japan's cities in the 1980s.
Oh and, weren't we supposed to have cities in space by now? Using computers that still spat out ticker-tape, of course.
I heard a rumour that there was concrete cancer on the shinkansen track from Tokyo to Nagoya. They painted it with some obscenely expensive paint system to fix it. Maybe that's the reason for the selection of that run for this new system.
Heard about a guy who lived in Osaka & worked in Tokyo (three hours each way) His teiki (month pass) was the same as my salary back then. Must have had one hell of a wife, one way or the other.
thx e
If you wanted to piss off the Japanese (probably not wise), you wouldn't start with the Shinkansen or similar. There are plenty of lines in & around Tokyo that are more critical. Its also pretty hard to steer a train into anything worthwhile. Some sort of physics thing apparently.
thx e
Wanna bet? Cash only, no credit cards please.
Transrapid. History of Transrapid development
Funnily enough, this other story was out last week: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/scotland/glasgow_and_we st/6577311.stm?ls
So, at least one other "push" to use the technology for the public good. Sure, it might (see probably) not happen, but it would be great to travel from the East to West coast of Scotland in 15 minutes!
In Japan the game is - regarding construction boondoggles (think FDR-style public works, CCC, etc.) - to use taxpayer *SAVINGS* not tax revenues! This outstandingly clever scheme involves the government raiding the postal savings system as a hidden budget. The Japanese postal savings system has over a trillion in savings - making it by far the world's largest "bank." Koizumi had a goal to get the government's grasping hands out of these near-bottomless coffers but I don't think he succeeded. I highly doubt anyone else will be able to muster the political authority or public support necessary to even get as far as he did. Because most Japanese households have at least one postal-savings account, and their rate of saving is very high, raiding the postal savings system looks irresistible to politicians. Hey, everyone's doing it.
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learnjapanese.poddedcell.net (Step Up Nihongo - Bobby Valentine's favorite Japanese textbook)