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Japanese Maglev Train Hits 500kph

An anonymous reader writes Japan has now put 100 passengers on a Maglev train doing over 500kph. That's well over twice as fast as the fastest U.S. train can manage, and that only manages 240kph on small sections of its route. The Japanese Shinkansen is now running over 7 times times as fast as the average U.S. express passenger train. 500kph is moving towards the average speed of an airliner. Add the convenience of no boarding issues, and city-centre to city-centre travel, and the case for trains as mass-transport begins to look stronger.

419 comments

  1. Please wait here. by fahrbot-bot · · Score: 4, Funny

    Japan has now put 100 passengers on a Maglev train doing over 500kph.

    Were they volunteers?

    --
    It must have been something you assimilated. . . .
    1. Re:Please wait here. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      they are safer on the train, than they are when they are driving to the train station in their cars

    2. Re:Please wait here. by green1 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      You think the Japanese drove individual cars to the station? That's actually rather funny... Everyone driving their own car everywhere they go is not the culture in Japan (nor would it be even remotely practical with their population density in their major centres)

      I'll agree that the train was likely quite safe though.

    3. Re:Please wait here. by Blaskowicz · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Indeed they probably take a train to go to the train station :-)

    4. Re:Please wait here. by AmiMoJo · · Score: 5, Interesting

      The station is actually quite remote. I went there and rode this train at 500kph a couple of years ago (they recently opened a new part of the track, doubling it's length, but you have been able to ride it for years) and it's out in the mountains. You can drive there but by far the best way is to get the train to a near-by town and then take the bus or a taxi to the station.

      It's an incredible machine. So smooth and quiet, and faster than you can ever imagine going. Sure, aircraft travel faster, but only when they are 10,000 metres off the ground, so the experience of doing over 500kph with scenery wizzing past at eye level is quite unique.

      They intend to start operation at 550 kph but then raise it up to around 900 kph over time. Much of the track is built in very long tunnels under mountains to make the route more direct and to prevent noise pollution. The current trains are limited to 320 kph because of the noise they make when exiting tunnels, even though they are capable of at least 360 kph.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    5. Re:Please wait here. by drinkypoo · · Score: 2

      The current trains are limited to 320 kph because of the noise they make when exiting tunnels, even though they are capable of at least 360 kph.

      Do you mean to say that the noise they make while exiting tunnels is greater than if they were simply traveling at that speed across open ground? And if so, it seems like they could build some sort of train silencer that would reflect the sound upward or something.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    6. Re:Please wait here. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not sure about the countryside but stations in big cities are often packed with parked bicycles during the day. That's a common sight.

      That would be crazy to use a car in - say - Tokyo. There are far enough means of public transportation. People walk. I used to have 3 differents line accessible in a 10 min walk radius.

      The shinkansen is awfully efficient. You have no idea how easy it is to travel from city to city - until you have experienced it.

    7. Re: Please wait here. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      See http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tunnel_boom .

    8. Re:Please wait here. by knightghost · · Score: 1

      The real question is: "What's the cost?". The real cost, BEFORE all those subsidies.

    9. Re: Please wait here. by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      See http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki... .

      Ok, done, thank you. It says you can mitigate the problem. It seems like you could do something both to help avoid it in the first place, and also to reduce the penalty for failure to do so.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    10. Re:Please wait here. by mean+pun · · Score: 1

      Japan has now put 100 passengers on a Maglev train doing over 500kph.

      Were they volunteers?

      They were the lucky winners of a lottery, with odds of less than 1%. See http://ajw.asahi.com/article/b...

    11. Re:Please wait here. by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      What's the cost of driving a car BEFORE all those subsidies?

    12. Re:Please wait here. by St.Creed · · Score: 2

      Aha... so they made sure to select lucky people only. I understand. It's a good idea for a trial run :)

      --
      Therefore, by the (faulty) logic you're using, you're just a cow with a keyboard - osu-neko (2604)
    13. Re: Please wait here. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What's the cost of being a fat fuck in the US BEFORE the subsidies on food, oil, and corn syrup?

    14. Re:Please wait here. by Applehu+Akbar · · Score: 1

      Yes, country stations are crammed with bicycles during the working day, most of them unlocked.

    15. Re:Please wait here. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bicycles (left unlocked at the station) and umbrellas (deposited in holders outside of convenience stores) are about the only things that are frequently stolen in Japan.

    16. Re:Please wait here. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What's the cost of driving a car, you know, BEFORE the cost of building all these roads, gasoline infrastructure, negative externalities on the environment and air quality....

    17. Re:Please wait here. by tigersha · · Score: 1

      This is the case, yes. As afar as I recall the noise has something to do with a shockwave when the trains enters or exits a tunnel.

      Tunnels and shockwaves are also the reason the high-speed trains are pressurised. Deutsche Bahn (who also runs 300+ kph trains) advertised a while ago for a physicist who is an expert on shock waves.

      --
      The dangers of excessive individualism are nothing compared to the oppressiveness of excessive collectivism
    18. Re:Please wait here. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you mean to say that the noise they make while exiting tunnels is greater than if they were simply traveling at that speed across open ground? And if so, it seems like they could build some sort of train silencer that would reflect the sound upward or something.

      As I understand it the noise is created when a train *enters* a tunnel, but the noise occurs at the exiting end - the spike in air pressure when the train enters the tunnel creates a shockwave that travels down the tunnel and sort of a sonic boom when the shockwave exits. They combat it by making the tunnel openings larger and giving the trains funny looking duck-billed noses.

    19. Re:Please wait here. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is no subsidy on driving a car, only taxes (fuel tax, road tax, new vehicle tax, etc.).

    20. Re:Please wait here. by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      Yep, and they have indeed tried to build silencers. They look like a series of archways extending out from the exit to the tunnel. The noise is primarily a shockwave caused by the train compressing air in the tunnel as it enters it, and the archways act a bit like a silencer on a gun.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    21. Re:Please wait here. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The current trains are limited to 320 kph because of the noise they make when exiting tunnels, even though they are capable of at least 360 kph.

      Do you mean to say that the noise they make while exiting tunnels is greater than if they were simply traveling at that speed across open ground? And if so, it seems like they could build some sort of train silencer that would reflect the sound upward or something.

      There's a huge boom from the compressed air inside the tunnel when exiting, like when firing a gun.

  2. how much does that cost to build? by Joe_Dragon · · Score: 4, Interesting

    how much does that cost to build?

      U.S. express passenger train run over old rails / rail lines.

    1. Re:how much does that cost to build? by sxpert · · Score: 0

      money is not an issue when transportation of people is the matter.

    2. Re:how much does that cost to build? by itsenrique · · Score: 1

      Yes, but this seems to have turned into a big Achilles heal as far as our system is concerned. The "traditional" rail folks are usually against high speed trains. Low speed freight is the only type of train that gets political traction here. And, let me be clear: I don't think half the rail proposals I see in the US make any sense. A big reason why is: not elevated, and not fast enough! If its not elevated, why take it? It's merely a glorified bus with dedicated lanes. Do that if that is all there is money for. But at the same time, some parts of the country could use this high speed elevated approach. It requires a high population density and isn't for everywhere. But, I ask, what is the point of a slow passenger train for commuting?

    3. Re:how much does that cost to build? by sxpert · · Score: 1

      yeah, it's called "public investment", each person pays a little bit so that everyone can use the thing, think "public roads"

    4. Re:how much does that cost to build? by Gr8Apes · · Score: 1

      But, I ask, what is the point of a slow passenger train for commuting?

      In the US? Just about none in most of the country. If you can drive there faster and cheaper than taking a train, why take a train?

      --
      The cesspool just got a check and balance.
    5. Re:how much does that cost to build? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

      According to wikipedia about $80bn (9 trillion yen). https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ch%C5%AB%C5%8D_Shinkansen

    6. Re:how much does that cost to build? by Jack9 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      > money is not an issue when transportation of people is the matter.

      How do you come to that nonsensical conclusion?
      http://calwatchdog.com/2012/07..., I think we all remember the bridges to nowhere 10 years back, etc.

      --

      Often wrong but never in doubt.
      I am Jack9.
      Everyone knows me.
    7. Re:how much does that cost to build? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Public transportation is generally a good idea so it's fine to shove some extra money into it.

    8. Re:how much does that cost to build? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sure, shove as much as you want without proper oversight and accounting for how it's spent! Stupid fuck.

    9. Re:how much does that cost to build? by Opportunist · · Score: 5, Funny

      What? People working together to build something they all benefit from instead of everyone trying to rip everyone else off?

      THAT'S COMMUNISM!

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    10. Re:how much does that cost to build? by Kjella · · Score: 2

      For commutes they're high density, a double train set is 500 passengers in one go. At least here in Europe trains are often the way for the suburbs to reach the inner city public transport (bus/tram/subway). As for long distance travel I'd favor trains over bus any day of the week. A train lets you get up and walk. The toilet is not extremely cramped. There's a cafeteria section where you can get some food and snacks. Sleeping cabins too, which can be a rather nice compared to flying in with a very, very early morning flight. They've added fairly advanced communications gear to get good wireless coverage entire way too.

      The really major downside to trains is when they're not reliable. Any train that breaks down or derails is a beast to move and if the tracks are out there's no such thing as taking a detour. Avalanches, floods, rock slides, and signal failures are all far more complicated to handle than replacing the bus or grounding the airplane. Been there, done that... night train, had to get up at 3AM, bring everything to a bus to get by a flooded area, half an hour bus ride, then get back on a new train going the rest of the way. Very much not fun.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    11. Re:how much does that cost to build? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "..If you can drive there faster and cheaper than taking a train, why take a train?..."

      If you can drive there faster than 500 kph (= 330 mph) then good luck to you.

      Can you tell me when you're going to do that? I'd like to watch...

    12. Re:how much does that cost to build? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you can drive there faster and cheaper than taking a train, why take a train?

      Sure, if you can drive there faster.

      During rush hour traffic, that's a big if.

    13. Re:how much does that cost to build? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      and I forgot to add!, I am an ignorant fucktard who just shit his pants

    14. Re:how much does that cost to build? by __aaltlg1547 · · Score: 1

      It sure is when you're trying to get a project built.

    15. Re: how much does that cost to build? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I used to think that at-grade light rail was stupid. But then I realized a few things

      1) Rail is immobile. Property values go up more and are more stable with rail because there's much less chance of a reroute.

      2) Rail is more comfortable. I live in SF where we have third-world public transit-- ubiquitous buses which are slow and uncomfortable. Even though the few light rail lines are not much faster above ground than the trains, they're much more comfortable.

      3) Similar to #1, at grade rail still makes it easier to time stop lights.

      Bus Rapid Transit enjoys #1 and 2, but not #3 but it is def better than a regular bus.

      I've taken BRT in Mexico and Ecuador, so I know what it can be. But nothing can ever beat awesome subway systems, like in Shanghai, London, Seoul, Singapore, etc.

    16. Re:how much does that cost to build? by Sri+Ramkrishna · · Score: 1

      Congestion. At least in teh urban areas, having a public transport system is really really fast, will get cars off the road. It will also generate density around each of the stations. Greater density is actually excellent for the free market, as people congregate around these areas. Great choice, greater everything. The problem is that most people believe in the car economy. The effects of the 'pioneer spirit' of individual ruggedness is what propagates the car economy or even guns. They are pillars of most rural and even urban thought. So, of course things like high speed transport is relatively foreign and hard for people to get their minds around. When people think of public transport in the U.S., it's usually a place where the mentally ill, the alcoholics, junkies congregate, especially during the nocturne hours. So, there is also the fact at least in urban area that it is not a respectable way to travel. In Portland, the Max is quite popular and is continually to gain ridership. But it really needs to be a lot faster in order to support the growth of people in this area. Portland and the surrounding areas are getting mroe crowded and the roads are not able to cope. Even if you expand the roads, it just puts more people on the roads and you just end up having even more people on the roads, leading to more congestion.

      A good rail network will give you more bang for buck on the same set of land. It might be interesting to reclaim some of the roads as high speed rail and see if that gets us anywhere. Sadly, Europe and Japan are ahead because they had a devestating world war that destroyed most of the infrastructure and they were able to get the kind of infrastructure that is scalable. The U.S. did not have that, and it would be very difficult to do what I envision in the first paragraph.

    17. Re:how much does that cost to build? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The American people will not stand for that I agree!

      By the way Congratulations on winning your seat in Congress!

    18. Re:how much does that cost to build? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When people think of public transport in the U.S., it's usually a place where the mentally ill, the alcoholics, junkies congregate, especially during the nocturne hours.

      Other countries get those scum out of the public areas, while in the U.S. they're cultivated for their votes and hence the usual activists scream "civil rights violation" whenever anyone tries to clean the place up.

      Sadly, Europe and Japan are ahead because they had a devestating world war that destroyed most of the infrastructure and they were able to get the kind of infrastructure that is scalable. The U.S. did not have that, and it would be very difficult to do what I envision in the first paragraph.

      No, Europe (until recently) and Japan are far more unified in their culture, not being cursed with "diversity" like the U.S. is. There are too many groups to appease in the U.S. for anything large-scale to get done anymore, which is why projects that cover large areas and have only long-term payoffs can't even be started, let alone completed.

      Fortunately, once the U.S. empire falls and we go into our dictator phase, such projects will be much easier, as those who object will be shot.

    19. Re:how much does that cost to build? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When those events do happen, there's less chance of loss of life though at least, and while the delays caused by train 'events' really are quite drastic, they're actually much less common than a few extra hours waiting around on a plane.

      Really major breaks (such as rails) aren't unheard of, but are extremely uncommon, and while I've certainly been half an hour late on arrival of a six hour ride on many occasions, I've never had to deal with 12 hours, or a flat-out cancelled flight. Even when it's an hour delayed, they speed up a bit and make up for some of the lost time, and if nothing else I'm laying back in a moderately spacious lazy-boy style seat (look under, the seat folds out for leg rests) with an AC outlet and crappy internet (good speed, just severe lag so no gaming) most of the way.

      Mind you my experience is primarily with VIA rail, up in Canada.
      There's also the commuter trains all over montreal island, which actually lead off the island, and can easily turn an hour of morning traffic into twenty minutes of sitting. Their drawback's the timing though: I live on the island and work off of it, which means that as I'm "in reverse" for rush hours I've got ONE train that I can catch to work in the morning, as everything else is going the other way. Miss it and I'm screwed out half my shift!

    20. Re:how much does that cost to build? by Gr8Apes · · Score: 1

      You missed the point, although I agree just about everything you said. I'd love for cities to have mass transit. It'd be awesome and save me the aggravation of dealing with the hassles of a car. At this time, taking public transit generally greatly increases the time to get from A to B, and often will cost you more, especially if there's more than 1 traveling.

      --
      The cesspool just got a check and balance.
    21. Re:how much does that cost to build? by Gr8Apes · · Score: 1

      If you can drive there faster and cheaper than taking a train, why take a train?

      Sure, if you can drive there faster.

      During rush hour traffic, that's a big if.

      Generally, here, the answer will almost always be "yes". Why? Because the train system only hits a few main routes and my work, as an example, has never been closer than 2 miles from a train station. If work buildings and living quarters were close to where you need to be, then mass transit is awesome.

      --
      The cesspool just got a check and balance.
    22. Re:how much does that cost to build? by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      So there's different answers for different locales. London for example could not work without trains. It was the trains that were the catalyst for it to grow so big and for the housing to be made in the suburbs.

      Likewise with Japan - it has a relatively small and long/thin main island, which is heavily populated. Universal car ownership won't work. But having trains running up and down the country and in and out of the cities works perfectly.

    23. Re:how much does that cost to build? by nukenerd · · Score: 1

      I don't think half the rail proposals I see in the US make any sense. A big reason why is: not elevated, and not fast enough! If its not elevated, why take it? It's merely a glorified bus with dedicated lanes.

      You are not making sense (ie I don't understand what you are saying). Is this American language? Elevated, what's that?

      In The UK, in most big cities, it is crazy to drive a commute by car and nearly as crazy to use a bus, even with dedicated lanes. The dedicated lane system breaks down at junctions, and there are stops every few yards where scores of people get on and off, all fumbling with money or payment cards. For a fit person it is quicker to get off and walk. Anything involving the public road is just slow, slow, slow. You talk about "slow" commuter trains, but they are going at the speed of light compared with road traffic.

      Not quite knowing what you mean by elevated, perhaps you are thinking of trains as things sharing the road with cars. In the UK we call those trams, and trains are things with their own dedicated infrastructure, whether at ground level, on viaduct or in tunnel, with nothing else in the way, such that the only restriction on speed is the engineering.

    24. Re:how much does that cost to build? by davydagger · · Score: 1

      "slow" train is relivant to other trains. Most "slow" commuter trains still travel faster than cars, especially in rush hour. A fast train moves multiples the speed limit for cars.

    25. Re:how much does that cost to build? by Kojiro+Ganryu+Sasaki · · Score: 1

      Yeah I know. The republicans are all about making large infrastructure investments, but minority groups obstruct their plans every chance they get. It's like some Live and Let Die black conspiracy turned real.

    26. Re:how much does that cost to build? by Gr8Apes · · Score: 1

      Technically, all cities should have worked out that way. The way most US cities were built out in the last 100 years is generally unsustainable. The current growth rates for many of the bigger cities cannot be accommodated with the current road systems, nor simple expansion.

      --
      The cesspool just got a check and balance.
    27. Re:how much does that cost to build? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Communism is a dictatorship, which spys on its own people, locks them up without trial - Oh wait thats America.

      What your talking about is socialism.

    28. Re:how much does that cost to build? by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      *shrug* Communism, Socialism, Terrorism... I stopped keeping current with the boogeyman du jour.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  3. Is it wrong to wish for it to crash? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Damn that would be quite the train wreck!

    1. Re:Is it wrong to wish for it to crash? by sxpert · · Score: 2

      there's no way for the train to derail, considering the design (the thing literally runs in a 3 ft deep ditch)

    2. Re: Is it wrong to wish for it to crash? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

      Challenge accepted!

    3. Re:Is it wrong to wish for it to crash? by Waffle+Iron · · Score: 1

      there's no way for the train to derail, considering the design (the thing literally runs in a 3 ft deep ditch)

      Yet by my calculations, the train has enough kinetic energy to lift itself over 3100 feet up into the air. So the depth of any ditch isn't really going to help.

      I assume it's "locked" into the track, but at these speeds the entire train could probably disintegrate into confetti if it hit a solid enough obstacle, so it's not impossible for the majority of the mass of train to come off the rails.

    4. Re: Is it wrong to wish for it to crash? by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure how anyone finds this "joke" funny. If one of these things crashes at full speed, it is unlikely that anyone survives, and you are looking at more fatalities than flying a passenger aircraft into the WTC on 9/11.

      --
      If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
    5. Re: Is it wrong to wish for it to crash? by radarskiy · · Score: 4, Informative

      "If one of these things crashes at full speed, it is unlikely that anyone survives"

      Why do you think this?

      Crashes at up to 300kph in Japan and France have resulted in 0 fatalities. The worst "high-speed" crash was Eschede with a 50% fatality rate at "only" 200 kph because it went sideways into a bridge piling after derailing onto both sides of the switch and the bridge collapsed on top of it. As sxpert notes, for that to happen with this track design would require also lifting the train several feet to get it out of its trench before you could get it turned far enough to take out a bridge. The proximate failure at Eschede, where snagging the points resulted in the leading and trailing trucks of a car to leave a switch on separate tracks, is physically impossible with this maglev's track design..

    6. Re: Is it wrong to wish for it to crash? by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 1

      Right, so if the long term goal is to run these trains at close to 900kph, and something has gone wrong badly enough that they crash in the first place given the design, it's going to be some sort of catastrophic failure.

      --
      If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
    7. Re:Is it wrong to wish for it to crash? by dcollins117 · · Score: 1

      there's no way for the train to derail, considering the design

      I'm not usually one to brag, but here in the US we've mastered the art of crashing two trains together on the same track.

    8. Re: Is it wrong to wish for it to crash? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You have to read it with Barney Stinson's voice to find it funny.

      Regardless, I would mod it +1 Funny anyway (if I had mod points that is). If you're offended by what is clearly a two-word jest (as opposed to an actual threat) typed on a public forum, may I suggest you retire from the Internet at once ?

      Besides, these trains usualy have a maximum capacity around 1500-2000 passangers, so no, you wouldn't get more fatalities than 9/11, unless you somehow manage to crash it into a WTC-like building, and even then, keep in mind that it won't explode as it's not fuel-based.

    9. Re: Is it wrong to wish for it to crash? by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 1

      I know people who were seriously hurt in the London transport attacks, so while I'm not That Guy who thinks everyone who writes something dumb on the Internet is actually a terrorist, I still find such "jokes" in poor taste. Your mileage may vary depending on how many people you know were permanently disfigured or disabled just because they took the wrong train one day.

      Also, if you read my previous post properly you'll find my figures are right about 9/11. Not that it's really the point; I don't meet a lot of people who think jokes about flying planes into buildings are funny and I don't imagine I'd meet many more if each plane crash that day had only killed a hundred innocent people instead.

      --
      If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
    10. Re: Is it wrong to wish for it to crash? by davydagger · · Score: 1

      jokes in poor taste, on the internet, who knew? But this is terrible, bad form I say! We have reason to believe that this hacker named 4chan might also be involved. Say, old chap, I say we do something, like mabey pass a law banning tasteless jokes. Perhaps mabey install a filtering system and make people have to opt in.

    11. Re: Is it wrong to wish for it to crash? by Kojiro+Ganryu+Sasaki · · Score: 1

      Internet: Where being upset is worse than being an asshole.

    12. Re: Is it wrong to wish for it to crash? by tehcyder · · Score: 1
      To a certain type of asshole, everything can be defended by playing the "free speech" card.

      It neatly avoids discussing the actual content of what was said.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    13. Re: Is it wrong to wish for it to crash? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are kind of talking apples and oranges here. The safety record for high speed duo-rail (conventional flanged wheel on two steel rails) is excellent. MagLev has almost no history upon which to draw any conclusions. Japan's Shinkansen (HSR) has a nearly flawless record with no significant injury accidents since 1964, but it is duo-rail. TGV has a similar safety record. With proper design and maintenance, duo-rail is extremely safe. Mag-Lev? Who knows. History can teach us much. Opinions, without history to back them up, are just opinions.

      The Eschede disaster could and should have been avoided by personnel on the train. The accident related to wheel failure, and the conductor had sufficient information to justify stopping the train and should have stopped the train prior to the derailment. The fatality rate, while high was NOT 50%. There were nearly 300 people on board. 101 passengers died, 88 were injured, and 106 had no or minor injuries. There were 287 plus 6 crew members on-board. The wheel design defect has been resolved.

      In 2006 a MagLev traveling 106 mph collided with another vehicle and 23 people died. Fire has also been a problem with MagLev. While I certainly am not opposed to MagLev research, it is very important to recognize the inherent limitations of and problems with MagLev, AND evaluate cost-benefit, before expending much money on technology that is unproven. Incremental increases in (higher) speed results in exponentially increasing costs, with significantly decreasing benefit as higher speeds are reached. Cost-benefit cannot be ignored!!

  4. 510kph is airliner speed? by exabrial · · Score: 5, Informative

    Not to be "that guy" but I thought airliners cruised about 600ish mph... which is about 1000kph.

    1. Re:510kph is airliner speed? by aliquis · · Score: 1

      It's definitely moving "towards" that speed if it was a lower speed before though? =P

    2. Re:510kph is airliner speed? by itsenrique · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Thanks for pointing that out. However, considering the amount of time it takes to board/de-board a plane, the exact speed isn't as important as the total time spent between leaving your door, and arriving at your destination.

    3. Re:510kph is airliner speed? by sribe · · Score: 1

      Not to be "that guy" but I thought airliners cruised about 600ish mph... which is about 1000kph.

      I suspect that the reference to "average speed of an airliner" was not intended to mean "average cruising speed of airliners across models" but rather "average speed of a typical airliner over the course of the trip terminal-to-terminal", which would be significantly lower than cruising speed.

      So, in other words, typical imprecise writing from submitters and editors. Of course it's also possible they simply don't have a fucking clue what they're talking about, which would also be typical...

    4. Re:510kph is airliner speed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      "Average" speed. You can include anything in average to bring it down, like boarding, the time to travel from city to airport.

    5. Re:510kph is airliner speed? by JamesA · · Score: 1

      "the average speed of an airliner" would be less than it's cruising speed.

      Add in ticketing, security, delays, boarding, taxi time and runway congestion and it makes a lot more sense.

    6. Re:510kph is airliner speed? by fnj · · Score: 5, Informative

      777 cruise speed is 900 km/h, but the actual average speed from embarking to debarking - "block speed" - which includes loading, waiting for takeoff clearance, taxiing, takeoff, climbout, a percentage of adverse winds during cruise, waiting for landing clearance, landing, taxiing, and unloading - is a good deal lower.

      A block speed of 700 km/h, particularly over routes that are not very long, and match train route lengths, would not be too far off the mark. That's a lot closer to a train with a block speed not far short of 500 km/h, than is a naive comparison of 500 km/h to 1000 km/h.

      A train's block speed is also less than its "cruising" speed, but many of the factors that work against airliners are either absent or of reduced magnitude.

    7. Re:510kph is airliner speed? by phantomfive · · Score: 2

      Even in Japan, for long distances (Tokyo->Hokkaido) people tend to prefer airplanes. They are faster.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    8. Re:510kph is airliner speed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You don't even need to add in the time spent on board on the ground.

      Every flight is take-off, ascend, cruise, descend, landing.
      On shorter flights (the ones for which railway competition makes sense), the flight time spent not cruising starts to become significant.

      For example, London - Paris by air is around 350km, which in a fly-by at cruise speed would take less than half a hour.
      Travel time for a flight that takes off in London and lands in Paris is 1 hour to 1:40, depending on airliner, weather and air traffic.

      London to Paris with Eurostar train thru the Channel Tunnel is 495km and takes 2:15 hours.

      So you can see that even "regular" hi-speed trains like Eurostar (300km/h top speed) are already competitive with air travel on short trips.

    9. Re: 510kph is airliner speed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not during climb or descent, and definitely not if you're counting time spent in security and boarding/deplaning.

    10. Re:510kph is airliner speed? by Richy_T · · Score: 2

      TSA is already involved with ground transportation and is likely to be moreso, especially if speeds and usage increase.

    11. Re:510kph is airliner speed? by vikingpower · · Score: 0

      We're talking about AVERAGE speed here.

      Moron.

      --
      Religous speak to God. Insane are spoken to by God. When all shut up, one can finally hear Shostakovich in peace
    12. Re:510kph is airliner speed? by exabrial · · Score: 0

      You seem to be having a bad day. May I suggest kitten therapy? https://www.youtube.com/watch?...

    13. Re:510kph is airliner speed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      700 kph for medium distance jetliners

    14. Re:510kph is airliner speed? by dunkelfalke · · Score: 3, Informative

      These turboprops that are used by regional airlines are indeed that slow (ATR-72 cruise speed is 510 kph, Saab 340's is 467 kph, Bombardier Q200's is 537 kph).

      --
      "It's such a fine line between stupid and clever" -- David St. Hubbins, Spinal Tap
    15. Re:510kph is airliner speed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      TSA is already involved with ground transportation and is likely to be moreso, especially if speeds and usage increase.

      Not in Japan they aren't.

      Spending so many man-hours in having people just wait is extremely wasteful. There is no way Japan would to that to their economy.

    16. Re:510kph is airliner speed? by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Well, adding getting through the security theater and grope show, getting in the plane, finally getting the slot for take off and then getting up to the flight level... with everything in reverse again after your flight...

      I'm not so sure whether US coast to coast travel wouldn't be faster in such a train. But then people would have to go without the ever pleasant and popular ball groping by some pervert.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    17. Re:510kph is airliner speed? by vikingpower · · Score: 0

      LOL. You got me. Only objection: there are way more ( more or less attractive ) female actors in that video than there are men. Otherwise.... I think it is, indeed, time to take my dog Keks for a walk. Thank you.

      --
      Religous speak to God. Insane are spoken to by God. When all shut up, one can finally hear Shostakovich in peace
    18. Re:510kph is airliner speed? by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      In Japan maybe, but in the US? The security show sure adds a lot of time.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    19. Re: 510kph is airliner speed? by Frekja · · Score: 1

      The summary specifies average speed, presumably over short haul, including wait time on the ground. On this basis, high speed trains are competitive.

    20. Re:510kph is airliner speed? by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      The security show sure adds a lot of time.

      Maybe. It seems security usually takes around ten minutes when I get on a plane these days. Of course, other airports might be different, but being groped (or gently fondled) is the worst part of security.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    21. Re:510kph is airliner speed? by MildlyTangy · · Score: 0

      LOL. You got me. Only objection: there are way more ( more or less attractive ) female actors in that video than there are men. Otherwise.... I think it is, indeed, time to take my dog Keks for a walk. Thank you.

      I dont know about you, but I dont see a problem here. It *may* have something to do with the fact that as a guy, I do not find "attractive" men attractive, and it never hurts seeing an attractive woman either. But it also never gets old looking at cute kittehs. awww.

    22. Re:510kph is airliner speed? by Richy_T · · Score: 1

      There's no reason it shouldn't take a similar amount of time to board a plane as a train. Door count is the current major factor possibly along with seating density and requirements to stow luggage securely.

    23. Re:510kph is airliner speed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The "block speed" of the ICE is much lower than its top speed: it's accelerating or decelerating for most of the trip. I think these stupidly-fast trains need to be combined with some way to get on and off the train without making stops.

    24. Re:510kph is airliner speed? by Richy_T · · Score: 1

      And by "securely", I mean "not loose in the cabin during turbulence" not "keeping simps happy"

    25. Re:510kph is airliner speed? by vikingpower · · Score: 0

      That whole short movie is simply super-über-cute. Kittens. Wow. This could become an internet hit, and go viral. It has the genes for it.

      --
      Religous speak to God. Insane are spoken to by God. When all shut up, one can finally hear Shostakovich in peace
    26. Re:510kph is airliner speed? by ilguido · · Score: 4, Informative

      Perhaps because the Hokkaido Shinkansen will open in 2016.

    27. Re:510kph is airliner speed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      weasel words 'r' us.

    28. Re:510kph is airliner speed? by vlueboy · · Score: 1

      Nice. It's neat that this was uploaded just a few days ago.

    29. Re:510kph is airliner speed? by ColdWetDog · · Score: 1

      My dog would just love this!

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    30. Re:510kph is airliner speed? by vikingpower · · Score: 1

      Yup. So would mine. Kittens taste good.

      --
      Religous speak to God. Insane are spoken to by God. When all shut up, one can finally hear Shostakovich in peace
    31. Re: 510kph is airliner speed? by prefec2 · · Score: 3, Informative

      This might have something to do with the fact that the two Hokkaido and Tokyo are on two different islands.

      In addition you can fly in Germany from Hamburg to Berlin and Munich. But still most people use the train. For two reasons. Hamburg Berlin is 1.5 hours by train you cannot reach the plane in that time and definitely not fly. Munich req. 6 hours by train so a plane might be faster, but you can jump on a train every hour without planning for a specific hour. You cannot do that with a plane.

    32. Re:510kph is airliner speed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      since there is no shinkansen from tokyo to hokkaido, that's obvious

    33. Re:510kph is airliner speed? by timothy · · Score: 1

      "with everything in reverse again after your flight..."

      At least *so far* they seem to let me off the plane and out of the pretend-it's-secured area without additional groping, so at least that part's only once per direction of travel ;) (Except at some airports, like Phoenix, where a terminal change can make you go back through the pretend security.)

      --
      jrnl: http://tinyurl.com/c2l8yr / foes: http://tinyurl.com/ckjno5
    34. Re:510kph is airliner speed? by DerekLyons · · Score: 1

      Yep - Japan is (or at least was, the last was retired in 2006) the only country in the world to use 747 derivatives essentially as commuter aircraft.

    35. Re:510kph is airliner speed? by vakuona · · Score: 1

      I would add that (1) airports are usually some distance outside any major city and (2) You are usually required to have cleared security about 30 minutes before the flight on domestic flights.

      I live in the UK, and even though we do not have "proper" high speed rail, train journey times to London are quite competitive with flying. The quickest train from London to Edinburgh is 4 hours, and I can literally get on the train one minute before it leaves the station. If you wanted to get from central Edinburgh to central London, you usually need at least 3 hours to do so by train. This maglev train would be faster than flying no doubt.

    36. Re:510kph is airliner speed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm in Japan right now. You realize they use 767 and 787s for the regional "commuter" jets over here due to the high density?

    37. Re:510kph is airliner speed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not if it's done right :-)

    38. Re: 510kph is airliner speed? by G-forze · · Score: 1

      Add to this that Munich airport is located far outside the city centre, which requires the traveller to take a one hour train ride from the airport to the main railway station.

      --
      "There's someone in my head but it's not me." - Pink Floyd, Dark Side of the Moon
    39. Re:510kph is airliner speed? by tlhIngan · · Score: 1

      Yep - Japan is (or at least was, the last was retired in 2006) the only country in the world to use 747 derivatives essentially as commuter aircraft.

      Well, I think they use 777s now. Or other widebody jets.

      The reason is there are just so many people per trip that they have to use widebody jets just to keep up. It's not that they need the long-range capacity of the aircraft - they just need the fact those can carry lots of people at one time.

      Boeing actually makes a special manual for Japanese customers on how to best load their planes for efficient operations - since those aircraft never reach their regular cruising altitude where they're designed to operate best (the trip is too short). Partial fuel and how to calculate the best altitude for most efficient flight.

      Boeing also uses the aircraft for research - since those aircraft accumulate cycles far quicker, they can study and check for long term issues relatively quickly and fix the fleet before it becomes a problem.

    40. Re:510kph is airliner speed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Boarding and de-boarding planes took almost no time when I was there. Something to do with not allowing carry-on suitcases. This was right after the Kobe earthquake and had to take planes everywhere throughout the country (for a few months).

    41. Re: 510kph is airliner speed? by dkf · · Score: 1

      Add to this that Munich airport is located far outside the city centre, which requires the traveller to take a one hour train ride from the airport to the main railway station.

      Or you could spend at least 30 minutes sorting out a car hire and drive in through heavy traffic. Yeah!

      --
      "Little does he know, but there is no 'I' in 'Idiot'!"
    42. Re:510kph is airliner speed? by athmanb · · Score: 1

      Hokkaido is a bit of a bad example though since there's no Shinkansen service through the tunnel.

      Going 1500km the other way to Kagoshima the train takes about 7 hours, and the airplane 5-6 (from city center to city center). That's with the 270km/h regular Shinkansen. If you increased the speed to maglev levels the train would outperform an airplane.

    43. Re:510kph is airliner speed? by TWX · · Score: 1

      It just depends on how far you are looking to travel. If you're going from Boston to Washington DC then the time and hassle for security and boarding may make the train faster. If you're going from Boston to Chicago then even with the extra overhead imparted at the beginning of a flight, you're still going to get there more quickly flying than you would by high-speed rail, even if the train doesn't stop anywhere else along the way.

      Out west high-speed rail is less practical until you get all of the way to the west coast, and even there, most of the cities are oriented toward driving, not walking or mass transit. You're probably not going to get a lot of benefit for high-speed rail servicing Albuquerque or Phoenix or Denver, the cities are too far apart to make high-speed rail any more practical than flying, and would probably have too much environmental impact in the process of construction to make it worthwhile.

      --
      Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
    44. Re:510kph is airliner speed? by UnderCoverPenguin · · Score: 1

      You are usually required to have cleared security about 30 minutes before the flight on domestic flights.

      In the US, the TSA is working to bring this to train and bus stations.

      --
      Don't try to out wierd me, three-eyes. I get stranger things than you, free with my breakfast cereal. --Zaphod Beeblebr
    45. Re: 510kph is airliner speed? by tigersha · · Score: 1

      And you also have to schlep out to Hamburg's airport, which takes 30 minutes. And check-in. Which takes another 30 minutes.

      In München Franz-Josef-Strauss airport is about 40 minutes per train from the inner city. Which means you have ore than an hour to your final destination.

      So that took about 2.5 hours + the hour flight. Sure a bit faster, but much, much more hassle.

      --
      The dangers of excessive individualism are nothing compared to the oppressiveness of excessive collectivism
    46. Re:510kph is airliner speed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      777 cruise speed is 900 km/h, but the actual average speed from embarking to debarking - "block speed" - which includes loading, waiting for takeoff clearance, taxiing, takeoff, climbout, a percentage of adverse winds during cruise, waiting for landing clearance, landing, taxiing, and unloading - is a good deal lower.

      Also don't forget the additional time involved to retrieve bags, and additional travel block to get from the airport to wherever you actually want to go. Train stations tend to be fairly conveniently centrally located, airports not so much.

    47. Re: 510kph is airliner speed? by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      This might have something to do with the fact that the two Hokkaido and Tokyo are on two different islands.

      There's a bridge

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    48. Re: 510kph is airliner speed? by dunkelfalke · · Score: 1

      That is only because there is no Transrapid in Munich. Otherwise one would be able to start the flight at the Munich central railway station.

      --
      "It's such a fine line between stupid and clever" -- David St. Hubbins, Spinal Tap
    49. Re:510kph is airliner speed? by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Replace pre-flight ass groping with post-flight luggage roulette and you're there again.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  5. kph? by manu0601 · · Score: 4, Informative

    It is nice to pick international system units, however it would be better to do it right. This should be km/h, not kph.

    1. Re:kph? by OzPeter · · Score: 1

      It is nice to pick international system units, however it would be better to do it right. This should be km/h, not kph.

      Do you mean units of km/h like TFA uses?

      --
      I am Slashdot. Are you Slashdot as well?
    2. Re:kph? by green1 · · Score: 1

      kph is a very normal abbreviation used in much of the world for kilometres per hour. Nothing unusual at all in seeing it here.

    3. Re:kph? by aliquis · · Score: 1

      500 km/h?

      That's only 0.00000370624 furlongs / light-mile!!

      (1 light mile = 1 609.333 / 299 792 458 = 0.00000536815 seconds
      500 km / h in m / s = 500000/3600 = 138.888888889 m / s
      (500000/3600)*(1609.333/299792458) = 0.00074557736 meters / light mile.
      1 meter = 0.00497096954 furlongs
      (500000/3600)*(1609.333/299792458)*0.00497096954 = 0.00000370624 furlongs / light-mile.
      Now you know how the rest of the world feels!)

    4. Re:kph? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Only in the ass-backtarded USSA.

    5. Re:kph? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ok so it was the submitter that changed km/h to kph. Why would they do that? Do they think that metric system notation is too orthogonal and it should be dirtied with special cases?

    6. Re:kph? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've been to numerous countries and I have never seen this. This is certainly not used in much of the world. I guess its use is restricted to those backwards countries who still use non-metric measurement systems or are in the process of converting from them?

    7. Re:kph? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Can you do chains (old surveyors measure) per hindu kalpa ?

    8. Re:kph? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, not just U.S.A. Also in the other non-metric countries... what is it down to now, Liberia and Burma?

    9. Re:kph? by green1 · · Score: 2

      I live in Canada, and I see kph all the time. I have also seen it used in places in europe.

    10. Re:kph? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are conflating "common" with "correct".

      Wrong abbreviations and symbols (eg kph, Khz, Kg), incorrect use of significant figures in news articles (eg 1000 mi =
      1609.344 km), confusing energy and power, spelling and punctuation errors (grocers apostrophe's apple's), are all very common but are still totally incorrect.

    11. Re:kph? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I figure with "places" you mean the UK, which, like Canada, is one of those "in the process of converting" countries, right?

    12. Re:kph? by aliquis · · Score: 1

      I actually googled furlong and saw that one acre was the area of 1 furlong * 1 chain where 1 furlong supposedly was how long you plow ..

      Good measurement I'd say!

      "Oh it's how long my field is!"

      (Now I kinda wanted to say acre because in Swedish the name of a field you saw crops on is "ker", maybe it's from the English acre?)

      1 mile = 8 furlongs
      1 furlong = 10 chains
      1 chain = 22 yards / 100 links
      1 yard = 3 feet
      1 feet = 12 inches or 50/33 links.

      "Kalpa is a Sanskrit word (Hindi: ààà¥à kalpa) meaning an aeon, or a relatively long period of time (by human calculation) in Hindu and Buddhist cosmology. The concept is first mentioned in the Mahabharata. The definition of a kalpa equaling 4.32 billion years is found in the Puranas (specifically Vishnu Purana and Bhagavata Purana)."

      Seem like the Hindus got more of a clue than the Christians.

      "Relative long."

      Dare I say it will be a hell of a lot of chains in an hindu kalpa?

      Maybe it's easier to round it off as 0 googleplex chains per kalpa?

    13. Re:kph? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I live in Europe (Sweden) and have done so for a third of a century or so, and I have not seen "kph" used in Europe :-) .

    14. Re:kph? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe it was the use other foreigners gave, after 30 years in Europe I haven't seen kph once.

    15. Re:kph? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't forget the "food" calorie, or "Calorie" that's pretty much only used in the US.

    16. Re:kph? by Kevin+Fishburne · · Score: 1

      It is nice to pick international system units, however it would be better to do it right. This should be km/h, not kph.

      Unit Nazis per hour. :)

      --
      Buy your next Linux PC at eightvirtues.com
    17. Re:kph? by paziek · · Score: 1

      I wonder where as I have never seen it used here. Maybe in UK tho?

    18. Re:kph? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It seems Burma announced they'll change and Liberia wants to leverage US loans at low interest, lest they take their variables to the other side.

      You better take care, those guys really mean it.

    19. Re:kph? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I live in Canada, and I see kph all the time. I have also seen it used in places in europe.

      Which isn't "much of the world'.

      It isn't "a very normal abbreviation", it is gibberish of kilo-pico-hecto.

      "Nothing unusual at all in seeing it here" is the only correct bit, since this is Slashdot.

      First law of holes...

    20. Re:kph? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Do you mean units of km/h like TFA uses?

      I think s/he is referring to the headline.

      Correct or not, it lends to the story and to the site a non-technical air. Alas, for us foreigners to the US, all weird units look non-technical and having names based on human parts doesn't help at all.

    21. Re:kph? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I live in Germany and here nobody uses kph.
      It's km/h everywhere.

    22. Re:kph? by dryeo · · Score: 1

      When I learned traversing (a rough form of surveying) we used a metric chain of 50 metres, a 50 metre 1/4 in. nylon rope with every metre marked.
      Another fact, here in western Canada (Fraser Valley), the roads were laid out as a grid with each main road a mile apart and numbered by 8's so zero avenue ran along the border, 8th ave a mile or 8 furlongs north, 16 ave 2 miles or 16 furlongs north etc (streets started at the ocean and increased the same way going east) so each plot was a section (640 acres) or often split into 4, or quarter sections (160 acres). Most building lots traditionally were 33 ft or 66 ft on a side as well.
      As for acre, according to wiki, it comes from the old English æcer, often spelt aker with the equivalent Swedish being åker, probably from the same Latin root of ager or Greek (agros). (Of course slashcode eats the Greek spelling)
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A...

      --
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverted_totalitarianism
    23. Re:kph? by richlv · · Score: 2

      it's not normal. seems to be used by americans only - it's one way to identify an american :)

      km/h - try to remember that.

      --
      Rich
    24. Re:kph? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Still standard is km/h! I live in Canada too.

    25. Re:kph? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've never ever heard of km/h, did you just make that up? The standard abbreviation is kph and it's used everywhere.

    26. Re:kph? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      9.41Ãf--10^17

    27. Re:kph? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is really not a normal abbreviation. It's very rare to see it in Europe.

    28. Re:kph? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Given that the word for hour does not start with H in any of the European languages I can remember outside of English, this is a bit unlikely. I is common to say just Km. and mean Km/h

  6. Case stronger... by bhcompy · · Score: 1

    ...in places of high density

  7. 240km/hr? by green1 · · Score: 2

    Sure 500kph is a great achievement, but put it in perspective of what places that are interested in rail travel do, don't compare the speeds to the rail backwater that is North America. Normal trains in Europe do 300kph routinely.

    The problem with North American rail travel has never been a technology barrier, it's always been about having any interest in doing better.

    1. Re:240km/hr? by ekimd · · Score: 0, Troll

      Yeah, and population density certainly has nothing to do with it.

      Given that Japan has a population density of 337.1 per sq. km, and the United States has 34.2 per sq. km, maybe when the U.S. has a population of 3.2 billion we'll start to see some maglevs here, too.

      --
      'Impossible' is a word that humans use far too often. -- Seven of Nine
    2. Re:240km/hr? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      Comparing average densities is absolutely and utterly pointless. Noone suggests to build a Lincoln-Cheyenne maglev train. What about looking at dense regions rather? The US North-East megalopolis has a density of 359.6 people/km with over 50 million inhabitants total. More than dense enough for a maglev. Or even just conventional high speed trains.

    3. Re:240km/hr? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      You know that urban and rural population density isn't a 50/ 50 split?

    4. Re:240km/hr? by Crazy+Taco · · Score: 1

      The problem with North American rail travel has never been a technology barrier, it's always been about having any interest in doing better.

      Or more precisely, the problem with North America is that it's a country where most people would never even benefit from having high speed rail.

      The root cause of the lack of interest is that our nation's population is so spread out, you can't get rail to move you to your destination faster than a car, no matter how fast the train runs. It's not like densely populated areas of Europe or Japan where a million people all want to go from the same point A to the same point B. Americans are so spread out that you have many tiny groups wanting to go from many thousands of different point As to different point Bs. You'd have to make hundreds of thousands of train lines, traveled by only a handful of people, and even then you'd have to switch lines so many times as you travel the sprawling cities and suburbs that you'd never beat the car anyway.

      That's why most large American cities have bus lines instead of subways as well. Americans built their cities out, not up, and you can cheaply throw tons of small capacity buses on the roads going all kinds of different directions to move people about. It's really the only kind of transit other than a car that makes any sense in American cities like Houston, Minneapolis, Kansas City, etc. And even then, your car is going to easily beat the bus unless it's during rush hour when the bus drives in a dedicated lane. But at least the bus can go anywhere in any direction, so they still will easily beat rail in almost all scenarios, with the exception of a few densely populated East Coast cities like New York. They also do much more to relieve congestion, since more people can get where they want to go via bus than train, and are therefore more likely to take it.

      --
      Beware of bugs in the above code; I have only proved it correct, not tried it.
    5. Re:240km/hr? by silas_moeckel · · Score: 3, Informative

      Having worked at a DOT the primary stumbling block to high speed rail is the NIMBLY's that have a house that backs up the the rail lines. The secondary issue is wanting to keep stations every town aka every few miles making the effective speed hard to get above 30mph with all the stops.

      --
      No sir I dont like it.
    6. Re:240km/hr? by alen · · Score: 0

      magic of airplanes, you don't need to lay tracks and screw up people's property values. something the train nuts can't understand

    7. Re:240km/hr? by dinfinity · · Score: 2

      Normal trains in Europe do 300kph routinely.

      If with 'normal' you mean specialized trains running on a limited set of tracks, then yes: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/H...
      They apparently can go 575 km/h if you let them: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/H...

      What most people would consider 'normal trains' and normal tracks are limited to 200 km/h and usually less than that (130km/h and 160km/h are common speed limits).

    8. Re:240km/hr? by fnj · · Score: 2

      Or maybe, I don't know, we should be comparing routes and population of cities at the route terminii.

      For example, Tokyo (pop. 13.4 million) to Osaka (pop. 2.7 million) is 500 km.
      New York City (pop. 8.4 million) to DC (pop. 0.6 million) is 364 km. The DC-Baltimore Metroplex is 9.3 million.

      If you look at it that way, the disparity is much less. Nobody is suggesting high speed trains to connect every town in the US to every other town, but their complete absence from any routes at all is just third world primitive.

    9. Re:240km/hr? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You forgot about the part where your density argument is false. There are plenty of population dense areas that would benefit from high speed rail and have population densities equivalent to or exceeding many parts of europe and asia that already have high speed lines. please stop using this bankrupt argument. the GIS data are google search away. go educate yourself

    10. Re:240km/hr? by rolfwind · · Score: 2

      Yes.

      Fast trains need well maintained tracks, specially built for the speed, and the curves also have to take that in mind. The advent of cars and later planes have pretty much undermined rail in America in terms of people transport and many lines are only suitable for slow-moving cargo trains, some as low as 10mph.

      We're talking track that will bounce up and down out of the ground a good 18 inches into the air. I've seen this often enough with an approaching train in some sections. That track couldn't take 60 mph trains, let along several hundred mph.

      America, may as well be trackless for the most part for rail that is in any condition and design for high speed rail. Buses have pretty much put an end to trains as a serious passenger mover, too bad they will never reach speeds that would make it a serious distance mover for anybody but the person with time on their hands, a tourist or sightseer.

    11. Re:240km/hr? by Oligonicella · · Score: 1

      Tax them.

    12. Re:240km/hr? by DanielOom · · Score: 1

      I once travelled from Amsterdam to Poitiers. Until Brussels the TGV ran over normal rails at some 140 km/h, then quickly reached Paris Nord. Then it took an hour to get to the south of the city by taxicab, where another TGV left to the destination.

      Yes, in densely populated West-Europe trains offer an advantage and air travel is popular for trans-oceanic destinations.

    13. Re:240km/hr? by aliquis · · Score: 2

      magic of airplanes, you don't need to lay tracks and screw up people's property values. something the train nuts can't understand

      Yeah. Because everyone wants to live near the airport :)

    14. Re:240km/hr? by Twinbee · · Score: 1

      Magic of trains: you can stop midway at stations throughout the main journey to let people off.

      --
      Why OpalCalc is the best Windows calc
    15. Re:240km/hr? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Fast trains need well maintained tracks, specially built for the speed..."

      This is a MAGLEV. Where it's going, it doesn't need roads. Or tracks...

    16. Re:240km/hr? by alen · · Score: 1

      which defeats the whole purpose of high speed rail in the first place, especially when we have commuter airports outside the big cities. and you can always take a bus where you need to go from the airport or a cab or whatever. no need to spend $100 billion or more for HSR or some upgraded train system to duplicate existing systems

    17. Re:240km/hr? by Brett+Buck · · Score: 1

      True, but of course the reason there is no interest is that it is not liable to be economically viable. The existing high-speed rail in the US is largely in the Northeast corridor because it can make money there. The proposed California high-speed rail (currently only planned to run between about Taft and Pixley) is a make-work project that has no potential for ever recouping the cost. That's the case for the vast majority of the US, there wouldn't be enough traffic and passengers to make it return the cost of building it and the astronomical cost of maintaining thousands of miles of high-speed rail.

    18. Re:240km/hr? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      America was always too big for fast trains.

      Distances in the are so long, you might as well go for a plane.

      Also, not everywhere in Europe are 300 km/h routine speeds. Personally I can only really think of France with it's TGV service (and special TGV test-set ups have reached 500km/h with conventional wheels on rails trains, scary eh?).
      Maybe Spain has such fast trains as well.

      Thing is, you need a dedicated track system (freight trains on the same tracks wreck havoc with the rails, you can't rate them for the same speeds) and you need distances between stops that actually justyfy accelerating to such high speeds.
      In Germany, only one ICE-route comes remotely close to being serviced with 300km/h. In Germany, especially along the Rhine, you get a major city every 50km or such. In France on the other hand, you have major metropolitan regions nicely seperated by a few hundred km of journey, perfect to develop fast trains for.

    19. Re:240km/hr? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is a MAGLEV. Where it's going, it doesn't need roads. Or tracks...

      Doesn't need track, wut?

    20. Re:240km/hr? by clarkkent09 · · Score: 2

      The existing high-speed rail in the US is largely in the Northeast corridor because it can make money there.
       
      Not a single public transportation system in the US or Europe makes money. They all operate at a annual loss of anywhere between 10% (London Underground) and 90% (Austin CMTA): http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/F...

      Only a couple of places in the densest areas in the far east make enough to cover ongoing operating expenses but even they are not close to ever covering the initial cost to build it.

      The first rule of public transport is that it will always be heavily subsidized by the taxpayers.

      --
      Negative moral value of force outweighs the positive value of good intentions.
    21. Re:240km/hr? by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      It really doesn't defeat the purpose, you just have to have the right number of stops. Stopping in every town is stupid. But if the train stopped every hour or so that might well make sense.

      I wonder if you could put regenerative braking into the station somehow, so the train wouldn't have to carry it around. Sounds expensive. But maybe you could dump the power through the rails during the runup, and get it back while pulling away. That would require a minimum of additional equipment.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    22. Re:240km/hr? by jonwil · · Score: 1

      The real question is, would the advantages of a high speed train from, say, Washington DC to New York (leaves from a central station instead of out at the airport, dont need to go through as much security crap, dont need to be there hours in advance, don't have to worry so much about luggage, faster total door-to-door time etc) outweigh the disadvantage of paying a fair bit more for the ticket than you would pay to fly between the same cities on one of the cheaper airlines?

    23. Re:240km/hr? by Ichijo · · Score: 1

      In Europe and Asia, they have what are called "express" trains which skip lesser-used stations in order to keep average speeds high. Stations which have passing loops (sidings) even allow express trains to pass local trains going in the same direction.

      --
      Any sufficiently unpopular but cohesive argument is indistinguishable from trolling.
    24. Re:240km/hr? by radarskiy · · Score: 2

      "most people would never even benefit"

      The things about areas of low population density is that MOST PEOPLE ARE NOT THERE.

      By population density New Jersey should have the same or better rail/cellular/internet/etc. service than Belgium or Switzerland.

    25. Re:240km/hr? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not like densely populated areas of Europe or Japan where a million people all want to go from the same point A to the same point B.

      That is such a bullshit argument. High speed trains are used Europe and Japan in areas with lesser population density than some places in the US.

    26. Re: 240km/hr? by xaxa · · Score: 1

      Regenerative braking requires very little extra equipment, the electric motors are used as generators and the power produced put back into the electric supply (overhead wires).

      The alternative is simply dumping the generated power to a grid of resistors, which some diesel trains do, as it reduces wear on brake pads.

    27. Re:240km/hr? by Zontar+The+Mindless · · Score: 2

      ...you just have to have the right number of stops. Stopping in every town is stupid. But if the train stopped every hour or so that might well make sense.

      This is what the Jingguang does. It's about 2400 km with 14 stops if you go the whole route from Beijing to Guangzhou. 8+ hours station to station makes for a stop about every 40 minutes. Most of the stops are for just long enough to people to get on/off, but every third (or so) stop is a provincial capital, and is generally long enough to step out on the platform and grab a cigarette if you're so inclined. Nice seats, smooth ride, minimal baggage and security hassles, and about 20% cheaper than going by air. We figured we would have saved maybe 2 hours maximum by flying, assuming no delays or other foul-ups at either end.

      --
      Il n'y a pas de Planet B.
    28. Re:240km/hr? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah and in Japan the regions that make up Kyoto and Tokyo are well over 1000ppl/km2.

      I think you fell in your own trap there.

    29. Re:240km/hr? by lamer01 · · Score: 1

      Everytime I travel to a civilized country I think exactly that, US is 3rd world primitive that owns a massive army and WMD. Scary really.

    30. Re:240km/hr? by Kjella · · Score: 1

      I'm fairly sure we could operate some public transport on a for-profit basis, like for example bus service. The reason prices are normally set lower than this is:

      a) Congestion - building bigger roads is expensive and in many times impossible because you'd have to demolish inner city buildings. Also parking space.
      b) Economic - Lower mobility in low income classes, children, students, disabled and elderly that can't drive would create great inefficiencies that would make the tax base poorer, eventually leading to less tax income
      c) Environment - More pollution leads to more health issues leads to less people working and at least here with universal healthcare also an increase in expenses.

      Basically, you have the lines and prices that are commercially viable. Then we look at the benefits we'd get from operating more lines or at lower prices and pay them to run at a loss. It's a choice, not something that must be.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    31. Re:240km/hr? by thegarbz · · Score: 1

      Sure as long as the economic benefits of the investment are only returned to those who paid the tax.

      There's far easier ways to achieve the screw's up future you are going for. Cut all welfare, don't invest any money in regional areas, don't invest in farming or agriculture, give half of your money back to big oil.

      User pays, and user cashes systems are great aren't they.

    32. Re:240km/hr? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The existing high-speed rail in the US is largely in the Northeast corridor because it can make money there.

      Not a single public transportation system in the US or Europe makes money. They all operate at a annual loss of anywhere between 10% (London Underground) and 90% (Austin CMTA): http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/F...

      Only a couple of places in the densest areas in the far east make enough to cover ongoing operating expenses but even they are not close to ever covering the initial cost to build it.

      The first rule of public transport is that it will always be heavily subsidized by the taxpayers.

      Of the tens of thousands of public transport systems you have only 'referenced' a dozen.

      And your 'first rule' is incorrect. Reference? Yours.

    33. Re:240km/hr? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually Spain has the largest high speed rail network in Europe (around 3000km, second in the world after China).
      Then there's France with 2000km and Italy with 1500km.

    34. Re:240km/hr? by clarkkent09 · · Score: 1

      Another choice is to privatize. One thing that sets apart those profitable Asian companies versus unprofitable N. American and European ones is that Asian ones are almost all run by for-profit private companies, while US and European ones are almost always run by local governments.

      Even though Asian ones are heavily regulated and have to operate unprofitable routes plus typically have the pricing structure capped by regulation, the efficiency comes from being held accountable by shareholders and competitors as opposed to union infested local monopolies accountable to nobody except a corrupt government committee.

      --
      Negative moral value of force outweighs the positive value of good intentions.
    35. Re:240km/hr? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And, oddly enough, that's where the highest speed passenger trains in the US reside in general. Yes, they may not get much above 100mph, but they're there.

      What kills rail in the US is the inexpensive and well developed domestic air travel industry in the US. For some of the highest density routes, you've got multiple carriers with multiple flights a day that are pushing prices in the less than $100 per flight range. In the US, major population areas outside of the north east corridor are separated by at least 100 miles and often by several hundred miles. Most are already linked by low cost airliners. Texas has been researching putting in a high speed rail circuit between Houston, Dallas and Austin. The problem is, you can already fly between each of those city pairs for less than $100. This puts a practicle cieling on the rail passenger price of about half of that, so, about $50. To be able to operate with a similar load factor to what the airlines are working with, the state would have to pump mountains of cash into the trains to keep them solvent at those prices.

      What the US needs is a major investment in medium speed light rail that unites city centers with their larger suburbs and major airports. That will make the biggest possible impact on traffic congestion and green house gas emissions. Medium speed light rail needs far less investment with respect to track quality, etc, making it much more easily attainable.

    36. Re:240km/hr? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Our problem seems to be that we've broken our democracy by giving one vote not to one person, but to one plot of land, one dollar, etc.

    37. Re:240km/hr? by GNious · · Score: 1

      The root cause of the lack of interest is that our nation's population is so spread out, you can't get rail to move you to your destination faster than a car, no matter how fast the train runs.

      Even in places where the traffic slows to an absolute crawl every day during rushhour(s)?

    38. Re:240km/hr? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >The secondary issue is wanting to keep stations every town aka every few miles making the effective speed hard to get above 30mph

      In the US we need to build a hub and spoke system between the existing major airports. No stopping at every small town. Get close, rent a car, just like you would do for air travel. Take a leg by air, another by plane. It would work great, and really help the environment. The problems are people believing it would work, getting politicians to spend money on infrastructure, and the travel slowdown and pain that is the TSA.

    39. Re:240km/hr? by amiga3D · · Score: 1

      If air transport is cheaper then why put in rail passenger service? It seems wasteful to try to compete with something that works if you can't be economically viable.

    40. Re:240km/hr? by amiga3D · · Score: 1

      I can see an argument for high speed passenger service in the Northeast. New York, Boston, Baltimore, DC. Where else outside of that general area? They've been talking high speed rail in Georgia for decades and every study shows it'll bankrupt the state. Atlanta has some monorail service and the rest is served by bus. Outside of metropolitan Atlanta there is very little public transportation, the car rules. Most states are like that. Maybe one or two large cities and then lots of smaller cities and towns spread far apart. I remember when I was stationed in West Germany back in the 80's the population was somewhere near 90 million or so people in a country about the size of Oregon. The public transportation was fantastic. I hardly ever drove my car anywhere. As much as I'd like something like that here I know it is just not possible.

    41. Re:240km/hr? by amiga3D · · Score: 1

      Try getting a proposal to build out high speed rail passed. Put it on the ballot and it'll fail. The reason is that not enough people want it because they have to pay for it and it's not important enough to most people because most people will never use it. That's democracy in action. People bitch enough about building roads but most people use them so they know they have to pay. They bitch but they pay.

    42. Re:240km/hr? by amiga3D · · Score: 1

      Really? They have trains to nowhere?

    43. Re:240km/hr? by amiga3D · · Score: 1

      We have buses for those places. Dedicated bus lanes are great.

    44. Re:240km/hr? by Robb · · Score: 1

      The first rule of private transport is that it is also heavily subsidized by the taxpayers.

    45. Re:240km/hr? by dave420 · · Score: 1

      No, they have trains between cities, which happen to go through some sparsely-populated areas. We all know the US is a large place, but it has some areas of high population density where sane public transport would work fine. There really is no excuse beyond "[some] Americans don't want it".

    46. Re:240km/hr? by amiga3D · · Score: 1

      It's not "some" Americans don't want it. It's most Americans don't need it.

    47. Re:240km/hr? by dave420 · · Score: 1

      Today, maybe - you've not asked, so I know that's a guess. In the future, however, that is doubtful. That gasoline won't flow forever, and Teslas with 1 rider take up a lot of space compared to a rider on a train.

    48. Re:240km/hr? by dave420 · · Score: 1

      So you drive to the gridlock, get on a bus, drive through the gridlock, then get back in your car? You've not really though this through, which isn't really a surprise :)

    49. Re:240km/hr? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The difference is that with private transport, the user is the taxpayer. Fuel tax, road tax and new car tax pay for both road construction and maintenance and public transport (as well as many other things), but only motorists actually pay those taxes.

    50. Re:240km/hr? by amiga3D · · Score: 1

      If gasoline goes to 40 dollars a gallon then it might make mass transportation viable. Other than that though people usually go for the cheapest option.

    51. Re:240km/hr? by amiga3D · · Score: 1

      Look man, I would like nothing better than to walk to the corner down from my house, get on a bus and go to the train station where I'd take a train to town, get off the train and walk to my job. I'd love it, hell I've done it when I was in the air force stationed at Lindsey Air Force Station in Wiesbaden, West Germany. Here though it just isn't practical because people are spread out so much. I live in a county with population about 140,000 in an area of about 380 square miles. People are spread all over the place not stacked asshole to elbow like in Germany. Most people, the vast majority live in single family dwellings. You have no idea of the situation here or it would be plain to you. The nearest big city is over 30 miles away and really that is pretty spread out as well. They've talked for decades about a high speed train from that city, Macon, to Atlanta. They can't generate any interest because it'll cost a fortune and then people will still ride their cars up the interstate highway leaving the state holding the bag for all that expense of maintenance and operation. Every study has confirmed this so that even the proponents have pretty much given up. In the Northeast of the USA it's more like Europe. Lots of high population centers not that far from each other. I really don't see why a system like these high speed trains wouldn't work there but for the rest of the country it's a bust.

  8. KPH by raftpeople · · Score: 1

    Kamikazes Per Hour?

    1. Re:KPH by fahrbot-bot · · Score: 2

      Kamikazes Per Hour?

      Kardashians Per Hour - (the official business model units of E! Entertainment Television)

      --
      It must have been something you assimilated. . . .
    2. Re:KPH by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wouldn't that be 1 kim/h or 1 kibimeter per hour?

  9. Only KPH, meh by Crazy+Taco · · Score: 1

    I was excited till I saw the units of measurement. 500 mph, WOOOHOO! 500 kph, not so cool.

    --
    Beware of bugs in the above code; I have only proved it correct, not tried it.
    1. Re:Only KPH, meh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I was excited till I saw the units of measurement. 500 mph, WOOOHOO! 500 kph, not so cool.

      That's still almost five times as fast as traveling by car. That's plenty thrilling.

    2. Re:Only KPH, meh by dave420 · · Score: 1

      They are capable of running up to 562.5mph.

  10. None are economically viable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There is no "high speed train" extant that is not subsidized, sometimes heavily. Why do we continue to pursue these elitist wet dreams that will likely never be viable? If a given scheme cannot, at least, sustain itself, reject it.

    1. Re:None are economically viable by sxpert · · Score: 1

      you believe airlines are not heavily subsidized ?

    2. Re:None are economically viable by alen · · Score: 2

      1/3 of your ticket is paying for the local airports to operate along with the rents they generate and car rental fees. the subsidies are mostly there for out in the boonies airports

    3. Re:None are economically viable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What do you mean with elitist?

      The whole point of subsidy is that "normal" people can use this system. Seems like the opposite of elitist.

    4. Re:None are economically viable by Fwipp · · Score: 1

      They've taken the right-wing rhetoric so seriously that they honestly think progressive taxatation and public subsidies are regressive.

    5. Re:None are economically viable by jonwil · · Score: 1

      If that's the case they should drop subsidies for the airlines as a whole and instead say "any airline providing service to airport xyz gets a direct payment for the flights they run" to make flying to airports that wouldn't get service in a purely competitive market viable.

    6. Re:None are economically viable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If it is not elitist, where is the groundswell of masses demanding high speed trains? These schemes are always driven by self-serving politicians, industrial lobbyists and trade unions. The politicians then get money from the unions and lobbyists. Like grandma always told me: "follow the money".

    7. Re:None are economically viable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you believe airlines are not heavily subsidized ?

      Nope. The US taxes them instead. Now maybe YOUR airlines are subsidized...

    8. Re:None are economically viable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They are not subsidised, but they do get to use tax-free fuel, while petrol and diesel are taxed heavily, so they do effectively get preferential treatment.

    9. Re:None are economically viable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are totally ignoring how airplanes are subsidized on many levels. In ADDITION to direct subsidies for aviation, there are many indirect subsidies. Nearly all airports are acquired, developed, maintained and policed in part or in whole with taxpayer dollars. Furthermore, the air traffic control system is paid 100% with taxpayer dollars. The airport property and the airport facilities are not subject to taxation (another form of indirect subsidy).

      Contrast that with the rail industry. Generally speaking, rail relies primarily on private investment to acquire, develop, maintain, police and signalize their infrastructure. AND railroad companies pay taxes on both the right-of-way and the improvements to their right-of-way.

      When there is an economic downturn, government frequently responds by saying, "we've got to stimulate the economy [not a bad idea]. Let's invest in highways, ports and aviation facilities [an idea that expands and promotes those modes]." At the same time, railroad companies are FORCED to downsize or go bankrupt.

      For many years, commuter airlines were guaranteed a 7% return on investment by the federal government to promote aviation and encourage aviation to expand. Many local jurisdictions continue to subsidize aviation facilities to encourage airplane companies to serve their community.

  11. HP goes as cube of V by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's not clear that there's a significant advantage in going, say, 500 km/hr rather than 450km/hr. You burn a LOT more energy (goes as square of speed) for going the same distance. And unless you're going very long distances, the travel time will be dominated by those segments where you're going 100km/hr.

    Obviously, "the fastest train in the world" has PR value, but, for instance, the Chinese trains (knockoffs of the Japanese design) are capable of 350 and they run them at 300, saving energy and wear and tear (which also goes as O(V^2) or worse) without significantly increasing travel time on, say, a 1000km trip with one stop in the middle.

    The big travel time advantage of trains also depends on supporting infrastructure. If it takes you 2 hours to get to the airport an hour ahead of time for a 1 hour flight, if the flight took 1.5 hrs, you'd not even notice. Ditto for trains. The typical advantage is that trains are ALREADY terminating in a place with decent mass transit connectivity. How much of the "door to door" time advantage of trains over planes is due to those factors.

    And what happens when a Madrid type incident triggers security measures for high visibility, high dollar trains. Nobody is going to call for radar and xray scans to get on a municipal bus, but for a multi-billion dollar showpiece?

    In the US, there's also a geography problem. A lot of places you'd like to connect with a train are a bit too far apart: LA to Chicago is going to be a long ride (airplanes do it at around 900-1000 km/hr.. a 300 km/hr bullet train is going to take all day). Maybe Dallas to Chicago or similar. Or Dallas to Austin/Houston/San Antonio.. A train in 1 hr vs a several hour drive.

    But then you have a "right of way" acquisition problem. There's an entrenched private train industry that is perfectly happy running multi-mile long freight trains at 100-120 km/hr (partly because they got their land and construction funding in the late 1800s after the Civil War)... They're not interested in upgrading tracks for a small volume high speed train.

    Unlike China, where the central government can just say "we're putting the track HERE, and if you don't like it, tough", in the US, you have to buy the land, often with eminent domain processes.

    1. Re:HP goes as cube of V by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      mod up
      iirc, back maybe in the 70s, early gen shinkasen, the japs had to have a crew out EVERY night, re align the tracks which couldn't handlte the high speed trains
      (I guess they learned which is why they now use concrete ties)

  12. kph.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How are you supposed to understand and at some point switch to SI units like the rest of the world if you keep inventing these nonstandard notations for standard units as well? kph is clearly derived from mph. However, k indicates scale, not any particular unit (like distance, speed, mass, pressure, whatever). Kilos per second does not mean anything as it doesn't tell you what you are actually measuring.

    Please try to use km/h (kilometers per hour) or m/s (meters per second) from now on.

    Thanks.

    1. Re:kph.. by green1 · · Score: 1

      kph is routinely used in many metric countries. it's not at all unusual to see it.

    2. Re:kph.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You got it backwards. You shouldn't look at what metric countries do to decide what's metric -- you should learn what's metric to determine how metric a particular country is. If "kph" is routinely used then that country is at most 98% metric. Ditching "kph" may make them 100% metric.

    3. Re:kph.. by Fwipp · · Score: 1

      I disagree, I think using kph means you are, at best, 97.6% metric.

    4. Re:kph.. by ladoga · · Score: 1, Troll

      kph is routinely used in many metric countries. it's not at all unusual to see it.

      Then they do it wrong. Do they also not begin their sentences with capital letters?

      I guess we agree that kilometre (or kilometer for the US) is an SI unit. So in the International System of Units:

      k = kilo (prefix for one thousand)
      m = metre (base unit of length)
      h = hour (unit of time)

      Thus the correct unit symbol for kilometre(s) per hour is either km/h or kmh^-1. It's really that simple.

    5. Re:kph.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd say close but no cigar.

    6. Re:kph.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Technically...
      k = kilo or Boltzmann's constant
      m = meter or milli
      h = hour or Planck's constant

      You're right that encoding "kilometer per hour" becomes km/h, but decoding "km/h" takes some judgment.

    7. Re:kph.. by Zontar+The+Mindless · · Score: 1

      It's quite common in Australia to refer to kilometres as "Ks".

      --
      Il n'y a pas de Planet B.
    8. Re:kph.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Technically...
      k = kilo or Boltzmann's constant
      m = meter or milli
      h = hour or Planck's constant

      You're right that encoding "kilometer per hour" becomes km/h, but decoding "km/h" takes some judgment.

      No. Not technically. Only when you have to render them down to a deficient ASCII encoding.

  13. Efficiency by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I once heard a Japanese, I think it was a musician, say something like "machines should be efficient, people shouldn't." Instead of being efficient, people should be creative. These ever faster trains reflect the principle nicely.

    1. Re:Efficiency by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >> "machines should be efficient, people shouldn't."

      Nice thought.

  14. Nice, but still the wrong answer by WindBourne · · Score: 1

    Look, these high-speeds are not used for cargo, but for ppl. Worse, the real issue is not the rail, but the aerodynamic drag.
    As such, the real answer is hyperloop.

    --
    I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
    1. Re:Nice, but still the wrong answer by Blaskowicz · · Score: 1

      Some mail delivery happens on high speed trains :-).

    2. Re:Nice, but still the wrong answer by WindBourne · · Score: 1

      Yes, but not much. In the end, it is very light cargo that is carried. And hyperloop can do that, esp. at nighttime.

      --
      I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
  15. 500KPH - but what is the average *journey* speed? by petes_PoV · · Score: 1

    When you factor in the amount of time it takes to get from where you are, or where you live, into the city centre to catch this centre-to-centre train - and then out at the other end to your actual destination, is this really any faster than driving if you have a decent road network?

    --
    politicians are like babies' nappies: they should both be changed regularly and for the same reasons
  16. Meanwhile in America.... by Lumpy · · Score: 5, Interesting

    A train ride from Chicago to Atlanta takes 3 days and goes from Chicago to washington DC and then to atlanta to and costs as much as flying directly there in 2 hours.

    --
    Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    1. Re:Meanwhile in America.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who the heck wants to get from Chicago to Atlanta other than to catch a flight?

    2. Re:Meanwhile in America.... by 140Mandak262Jamuna · · Score: 1
      Of course you need to undergo gate rape by the blue gloved angels to get the privilege of flying to Atlanta from Chicago in two hours.

      Anyway Salad Express delivers fresh produce from California to New York in under 48 hours. In the hey days, Chicago to Miami was 33 hours. Chicago - Atlanta would have been some 18 hours. Instead of hating and decrying America's love for automobiles, if only the trains take advantage of them they could once again compete with the airlines.

      Everyone knows by now, trains move a ton of freight 450 miles on a gallon of fuel. If they deliver you and your car from Chicago to Atlanta in 18 hours for a comparable price to airline, they would be very attractive. Don't use the old downtown terminals. Build a terminal where people drive their cars onto flatbed railcars at the I95-I80-I84 interchange south of Chicago and drop off people at a similar interchange near Atlanta. People drive their cars on to the flatbed railcars, and walk over to the passenger cars. Then drive off in the end. The weight of passengers is so small compared to the weight of the train, and the trains so damned fuel efficient, they should be able to do this efficiently. But the only auto-train from Washington DC to Florida is so damned expensive. It is a chicken-egg problem. It can become cheaper only with a good market and a good market will happen only when it is cheap.

      --
      sed -e 's/Chuck Norris/Rajnikant/g' joke > fact
    3. Re:Meanwhile in America.... by rasmusbr · · Score: 1

      Alright, time for some back of the envelope calculations!

      A maglev line between Chicago and Atlanta through Indianapolis, Cincinnati, Louisville, Nashville, would stretch about 1200 km.

      Assuming a top speed of 500 km/h and a time penalty of about 10 minutes per station along the route and a 5 minute penalty for the departure and destination stations, the ride would take 1200/500 - (5+10+10+10+10+5)/60 = 3.23 hours, which would be quite competitive with air travel, based on travel time alone.

      I'm afraid the numbers would get rather bleak once we start to talk about the financial viability of the project. Generally, you get the most societal benefit from infrastructure projects that offer attractive options for day commuting, so any tax subsidies ought to be focused on such projects and not on projects that merely offer attractive options for weekly commutes or one-off journeys.

    4. Re:Meanwhile in America.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They use trains, we use planes. I know which I prefer.

    5. Re:Meanwhile in America.... by R3d+M3rcury · · Score: 1

      Personally, all else being fairly equal, I would prefer a train.

      Why would people rather travel by airplane? Because it's faster. And I don't blame them one bit. I'd rather fly across the country in five hours than take a train for five days. Who wouldn't?

      But trains have a number of advantages. There isn't necessarily the case for "let's see how many people we can jam into a given space." Cars can be added or removed based on demand. Luggage is another example--want to travel with a bicycle, wheelchair, or something kind of large? You're going to paying a heck of a lot more and it's going to be really inconvenient.

      Consider California's High-Speed Rail project--or at least the concept (we can argue over the implementation, but that's not the point I'm making). This would have trains that would go between LA and San Francisco in three hours. It takes about an hour to fly between LA and San Francisco--where I'm jammed into a tiny seat and have to pay extra just to bring along more than an overnight bag. Compare that to a three hour train ride where I have actual leg-room and could bring along clothes for a week stay without paying extra. Heck, I might even be able to bring a bicycle without packing it up!

      I know which I'd prefer.

      Now, I could sort-of take a regular train from LA to San Francisco (it actually ends up in Oakland). It takes about 12--count 'em--12 hours! Yeah, given a choice between an hour of misery or 12 hours of comfort, I think I'd put up with the hour.

    6. Re:Meanwhile in America.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Seems it takes so long simply because the direct routes have been eliminated. Like going Chicago to Detroit by way of Miami. Grudgingly providing passenger train service while going out of their way to make it slow and unpleasant.

      It is even worse in Canada. Passenger service has been routed away from the towns along the great lakes -- and regularly get shunted to a siding (usually a crumbling and long abandoned station) to wait while the freights rumble by. But its even better... in some places not only can you not get there by train but the bus service was shutdown too -- not enough profit to make it worth while. Every so often VIA (the national service) advertises special prices but mostly it is quite expensive -- think double the true cost of driving. With this going on the constant complaint from folks in the North is how expensive it is and how these costs inhibit development. Makes my head hurt.

      I have used the Japanese system -- really makes North America look like the 3rd world. Even more so when you consider the carbon impact of travel.

    7. Re:Meanwhile in America.... by Lumpy · · Score: 1

      You get gate rape at the trains now as well. the TSA loves raping people.

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    8. Re:Meanwhile in America.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Anecdote: My kids love trains, so I buy every used train book I can find at yard sales/flea markets. One had a neat little diagram showing the time required for many common routes across the world, and how its changed over time. As you'd guess, the time required for routes in Europe/Asia have all gone way down...the one exception was NYC-Chicago (or perhaps it was Chicago-LA) which actually takes a few hours longer now than it did 70 years ago!

  17. One of these is easy ... by TheGavster · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Add the convenience of no boarding issues, and city-centre to city-centre travel, and the case for trains as mass-transport begins to look stronger.

    This one seems REALLY easy to fix. Abolish the TSA, save billions in government expenditure and more billions in lost time and goodwill.

    --
    "Because Science" is one step from "Because old book". Try "Because of my experiment testing my falsifiable assertion".
    1. Re:One of these is easy ... by CrankyFool · · Score: 1

      Sadly, I suspect that what will happen if this becomes real is that the difference in hassle will be eliminated by implementing TSA-like processes for boarding trains.

    2. Re:One of these is easy ... by zippthorne · · Score: 3, Informative

      Thanksgiving is coming up. If you visit with your extended family, try floating the idea of abolishing the TSA and see what kind of responses you get.

      --
      Can you be Even More Awesome?!
    3. Re:One of these is easy ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just wondering: have you ever tried the Japanese system?

      You can step out of Tokyo metro system and get in Shinkansen to, say, Kyoto in less than ten minutes of walking in between. No matter what you do you can't beat that with air traffic. Also the fact that these stations are actually in city centres gives a considerable extra benefit.

    4. Re:One of these is easy ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I get a "hell yeah". My family might be different to yours.

    5. Re:One of these is easy ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Depends on your family. Mine would probably say 'Abolish what?', as most of them haven't been to the U.S. in a while (mostly due to TSA and everything surrounding it).

  18. Boarding issues by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What makes you believe that trains require any less security checks than a plane? Sure, today that might be the case but when you think about it both are equally vulnerable to terrorist attacks (trains even more so because less stringent security checks and the fact that their exact route is known well in advance).

    In short: trains are great mostly because of the extra leg room. Everything else will get worse over time.

    1. Re:Boarding issues by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      May I humbly suggest that you get off you fat arse and travel to Europe and experience high speed train travel WITH NO TSA in sight.
      I travelled from Marseilles to Paris last week. Turn up at the station, no security checks, get on train, eat a nice meal, get off at the Gare De Lyon feeling good.
      There ate high speed lines in Italy, Spain and Germany.
      The ONLY high speed train that has secutity checks in the Eurostar from Paris/Brussels to London. This is only because the UK is not in the Schengen area.

      Go on, you might even change your mind about train travel. Remember, the US is 3rd world when it comes to Passenger Train Travel.
      Most people on this side of the Pond wouldn't even think about driving into major cities. Far too much traffic. A 30 mile journey last night took me 2 hrs. If I'd taken the train, it would have been 40minutes. I was a fool!

    2. Re:Boarding issues by Richy_T · · Score: 1

      I don't think he was saying that the TSA isn't a stupid, wasteful abomination, merely that as soon as rail travel gained any real usage, it would be similarly encumbered as air travel in the US.

      Point being that many of the "issues" with air travel are due to bureaucratic nonsense and not issues inherent to the type of travel. Not so long ago, air travel in the US was apparently not so different to getting on a bus. There is a small airport a 5 minute drive from my house. Imagine if things had progressed unfettered. That would probably be linked into the air system, likely with small taxi-like passenger planes. Instead I need to worry about schlepping my family and luggage 40 miles into the nearest big city.

    3. Re:Boarding issues by Hamsterdan · · Score: 1

      "What makes you believe that trains require any less security checks than a plane? Sure, today that might be the case but when you think about it both are equally vulnerable to terrorist attacks"

      You can't fly a train into a building. Besides, a terrorist attack on a train won't have the same psychological effect (which is kinda the goal of terrorists)

      --
      I've got better things to do tonight than die.
    4. Re:Boarding issues by Fwipp · · Score: 1

      Exactly - flying is scary, taking the train isn't.

    5. Re:Boarding issues by silfen · · Score: 1

      I travelled from Marseilles to Paris last week. Turn up at the station, no security checks, get on train, eat a nice meal, get off at the Gare De Lyon feeling good.

      Which means that you're either a tourist, a student, or wealthy. Normal Europeans cannot afford to live anywhere near train stations in Marseilles or Paris. Train travel is expensive, and the reason they survive at all is because of massive subsidies and interference with other modes of transportation.

      Most people on this side of the Pond wouldn't even think about driving into major cities.

      Neither would most people on this side of the pond. Fortunately, between the Internet, Amazon, malls, and outlets, we don't have to anymore.

      Go on, you might even change your mind about train travel.

      Europe did change my mind about train travel. For example, the fact that going by high speed train is often slower than going by car once you take into account connections and unpredictability. Or the fact that travel by high speed train often costs several times what a flight costs. Or the fact that countries like Germany for nearly a century provided inter-city bus transport in order to prop up the train system.

      Passenger train travel was a necessity in the 19th and early 20th century; these days, passenger rail is a boondoggle for the wealthy and privileged. The US does have the largest and most efficient freight train system, larger than all of Europe combined. In Europe, much of that freight travels on roads, which is polluting, dangerous, and utterly irrational.

      The suggestion that the US should invest in passenger rail service is sheer idiocy.

    6. Re:Boarding issues by silfen · · Score: 1

      Oops...

      Or the fact that countries like Germany for nearly a century prohibited inter-city bus transport in order to prop up the train system.

    7. Re:Boarding issues by raxx7 · · Score: 1

      Trains can be attacked by terrorists. In fact, they have.
      A bomb was placed in a TGV luggage car in 1983.
      Commuter trains in Madrid were bombed in 2004.
      The London subway was bombed in 2005.
      (side note: attacking subways and commuter trains provide a much bigger body count and disruption of daily life than long distance high speed trains)

      But nobody added security screening to them.

      A train riding on a track isn't the same as a plane flying 30,000 feet in the air.
      Yes, they can be bombed and hijacked.
      But, unlike a place, a hijacked train can't be flown into a building or into another country or into the sea (after running out of fuel).
      When something goes wrong with a train, it stops.
      Specially, trains running under automated safety systems, will stop even without human intervention.

    8. Re:Boarding issues by Issarlk · · Score: 1

      Without passenger trains, road traffic to and from Paris would grind to an halt, literally, frozen solid. I suppose people would commute walking to their 50 km away jobs, making train not necessary, not at all.

    9. Re:Boarding issues by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Passenger train travel was a necessity in the 19th and early 20th century; these days, passenger rail is a boondoggle for the wealthy and privileged. The US does have the largest and most efficient freight train system, larger than all of Europe combined. In Europe, much of that freight travels on roads, which is polluting, dangerous, and utterly irrational.

      That is not true. There is very little competition between road and rail cargo. They cater for a very different market. In Europe, most bulk cargo (the type that is typically transported by train in the U.S.), is transported by boat, which is even more efficient than rail. Before the train became popular, Europe already had a great number of canals and when they became available, railways were built mostly for passenger service (which requires a larger speed than bulk cargo) and to serve routes that had become relevent only recently. The U.S. however, was still being colonised and the population expanded steadily across the country as the train became in vogue. It made more sense to build railways, which were cheaper and could cross the vast distances more quickly, than to invest in digging canals. In the twentieth century, passenger trains became insignificant in most of the U.S., so the rail network was focused on cargo almost exclusively.

      Additionally, less than 1% of the U.S. railway network is electrified, eliminating most of the environmental benefits that rail transport normaly has. A diesel cargo train is just a slightly more efficient string of lorries driving at a low speed.

    10. Re:Boarding issues by dave420 · · Score: 1

      Lots of people in Europe simply don't have cars because they can use the train. From my 7+ year experience of German trains, they are not unpredictable, and the connections are well thought out, including your train ticket being valid for the destination city's public transport for a few euros more. The train tickets do not cost several times that of a flight, and frequently the routes travelled are not served by flights anyway.

      I don't know where you got your information, but it seems highly suspect, and at least has been countered by my own experiences, rendering your post entirely moot.

    11. Re:Boarding issues by silfen · · Score: 1

      Lots of people in Europe simply don't have cars because they can use the train.

      The percentage of families without cars in the US is about 10%, and it's about 14% in Germany. And that difference is explained easily by the fact that Germans are significantly poorer. Anybody who values their time in Germany gets a car, because unless you live close to a major train station, relying on the train often takes hours longer than going by car.

      From my 7+ year experience of German trains, they are not unpredictable

      Statistics tell a different story:

      https://www.test.de/Deutsche-B...

      The train tickets do not cost several times that of a flight

      I've done it many times, e.g., on Ryanair. More recently, long distance buses have become the cheapest mode of transportation. Your careless and lavish spending habits don't make an economic argument.

      I don't know where you got your information, but it seems highly suspect, and at least has been countered by my own experiences, rendering your post entirely moot.

      From living in Germany longer than you did.

      Apparently, in "7+ years" in Germany, you haven't figured out a lot about the country.

    12. Re:Boarding issues by silfen · · Score: 1

      Without passenger trains, road traffic to and from Paris would grind to an halt

      How is that an argument for 500 kph Maglev trains?

      I'm not opposed to everything that runs on rails, I question the cost effectiveness of high speed long distance passenger rail service.

  19. cost by phantomfive · · Score: 1

    Add the convenience of no boarding issues, and city-centre to city-centre travel, and the case for trains as mass-transport begins to look stronger.

    No one is arguing against trains as transportation because they are too slow. The main argument against high-speed rail is cost. In fact, if it were cheaper, we'd have high-speed rail here in California already. Most people don't oppose having it, they oppose paying for it (especially once they find out the ticket price).

    --
    "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  20. Re:stupid germans by vikingpower · · Score: 3, Informative

    Germany has a very well-working system of high-speed trains, named ICE ( InterCity Express ). Most of those average > 300 km/h on stretches between major cities. Stupid Germans ? They overtook the French, with their TGV.

    --
    Religous speak to God. Insane are spoken to by God. When all shut up, one can finally hear Shostakovich in peace
  21. 510kph is airliner speed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Normal cruise speed for, say, a 757 seems to be about 530 mph. But that's airspeed. Ground speed could be up to 100mph faster (or slower, though if the plane was in a 100mph headwind it would probably look for a different altitude!). Then of course you have to count in climb and descend - in both of those modes you are travelling slower.

    It would be good to have a professional pilot comment on this, but I would not be surprised to find the average point-to-point speed on an internal flight (trains don't compete with international flights in the US, of course) being slower than 500 mph. And the Jap train is pushing 330 mph.

    So, 'moving towards the average speed' seems a reasonable comment. And this is not a specialist one-off experiment - they are trying out their next-generation trains in real conditions...

  22. Good for the show by Blaskowicz · · Score: 1

    but maglevs are generally useless. Old school high speed trains can run so many more routes being compatible with plain old rail lines. That gives you oddities like spending most of the time on the shorter, slower portion of a trip but it works and you don't have to change trains. A decade or two later, the trip's duration gets shaved by another hour or two if more high speed track could be funded and built. Even then, there may be some controversy about the high speed tracks (another project that eats physical space, cuts fields and habitats in half and concern about the funding, maintenance and decreasing operation of low speed tracks). In France some are peeved about the extension of the high speed network. The fares are too damn expensive and we don't need to have fewer local trains running.

    1. Re:Good for the show by radarskiy · · Score: 1

      " Old school high speed trains can run so many more routes being compatible with plain old rail lines. "

      a) A high-speed railset on a low-seed line runs at low speed
      b) Low-speed lines in Japan are mostly meter gauge, so the high-speed railsets can't run on them at any speed

  23. Run faster, dammit! by frank_adrian314159 · · Score: 1

    Japan has now put 100 passengers on a Maglev train doing over 500kph.

    Wow! They must be able to run pretty fast to catch it! Look out 2016 Olympics, here comes the Japanese train riders!

    --
    That is all.
  24. kilo pico hours? by hfollmann · · Score: 1

    Hey, the unit is km/h!

    --
    hfoo
  25. $62,000 per person, $156,000 per family by raymorris · · Score: 3, Informative

    > it's called "public investment", each person pays a little bit so that everyone can use the thing, think "public roads"

    Just at the federal level alone (think just the interstate highways), along with any taxes you're paying, we're incurring $10,000 per person of debt each year. If there are 3 people in your family, that's $30,000 per year your family will have to pay back sooner or later. Right now, we owe $62,000 each ($156,000 per family) .

    Is that "each person pays a little" or "each person pays a lot"?

    1. Re:$62,000 per person, $156,000 per family by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No pay no gain. Each person might pays a lot, but meanwhile each person GETs more. Inter-state highway system costs massive public funds (railway cost is often less than freeway's). Can you live without it?

    2. Re:$62,000 per person, $156,000 per family by drinkypoo · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Just at the federal level alone (think just the interstate highways), along with any taxes you're paying, we're incurring $10,000 per person of debt each year.

      Well, you may think about the interstate highways, and yeah I do that occasionally too, but I more commonly think about bank bailouts or dropping bombs on brown people as places where the money goes.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    3. Re:$62,000 per person, $156,000 per family by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're confusing the deficit which is an artificial result of not drawing revenue but instead preferring a system oriented towards generating financial outcomes by issuing bonds, with the actual mechanics of public investment.

      The twoare connected only by circumstances.

    4. Re:$62,000 per person, $156,000 per family by dryeo · · Score: 1

      Shouldn't the gas tax be high enough to pay for the highways? Shit, could be like Canada where the gas taxes are high enough to cover tax cuts for the 1%. As a bonus the oil companies can blame the high price of gas on the taxes (gas went up 4 cents a litre this week) and have surcharges (1 cent a litre) to cover the pipeline to send bitumen to China. Perhaps the oil companies will manage that for Keystone.

      --
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverted_totalitarianism
    5. Re:$62,000 per person, $156,000 per family by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      You do understand how this cycle will eventually come to an abrupt end, right?

    6. Re:$62,000 per person, $156,000 per family by BasilBrush · · Score: 2

      If there are 3 people in your family, that's $30,000 per year your family will have to pay back sooner or later.

      Classic mistake of thinking public debt is the same as private debt. You have to pay off private debt, because one day you will die. Public debt doesn't have to be paid off in a AAA economy, because they can outlive all the people.

      Public debt only needs to service interest. It does not "need to be paid off sooner or later".

      Meanwhile inflation shrinks the debt just as it does with a mortgage.

    7. Re: $62,000 per person, $156,000 per family by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He and the rest of the American public have no concept of the long term, and the impending collapse of debt funded government is as apparent to them as the impending heat death of the universe.

    8. Re: $62,000 per person, $156,000 per family by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, because we can die and leave the debt to our children.

      Americans are so stupid it's hurts my brain.

    9. Re:$62,000 per person, $156,000 per family by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Debt is high but it is not accumulating at $3 trillion/year.

    10. Re:$62,000 per person, $156,000 per family by Dutch+Gun · · Score: 1

      Yes, we technically don't need to pay off our debt. That doesn't mean there isn't a practical limit to how much we can actually be indebted without destroying our economy. Nor does it mean it's actually healthy to stay in perpetual debt to the extent we are now. We're currently largely staying afloat only thanks to China buying up massive numbers of US bonds. Consider the ramifications of that very carefully.

      We do have to pay off bonds when they come due, and we pay those bonds off with new bonds. Or printing money, which, yes, shrinks the debt, but it also shrinks the purchasing power of every other dollar out in circulation. And when you say "inflation shrinks the debt", what you are actually saying is that inflation reduces the return for people who invested in US Bonds, not to mention every other US-based investment. The reason it helps your mortgage is because you're actually paying the thing off. But the US is financing it's debt with new debt, so it gets hurt by higher inflation since that pushes up interest rates, the same as if you were refinancing your house every five years.

      It's not the debt that's the root of the problem, although that's bad enough. It's the near-perpetual deficit spending. To stop doing that, we need to either raise taxes, cut spending, or both. None of our politicians have the political will do it, because everyone understands it's going to cause a lot of short term pain when we do, and no one wants to take the political hit for that.

      Speaking of AAA... we lost our AAA credit rating in 2011, and it's been downgraded at least once since then, if I recall. We're still the largest economy (measuring GDP) by a good margin, but we really need to manage our debt better, or it may not stay that way. People seem to think we have some special magic that allows us to ignore the laws of economics that seem to apply to everyone else.

      --
      Irony: Agile development has too much intertia to be abandoned now.
    11. Re:$62,000 per person, $156,000 per family by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just at the federal level alone (think just the interstate highways), along with any taxes you're paying, we're incurring $10,000 per person of debt each year.

      Well, you may think about the interstate highways, and yeah I do that occasionally too, but I more commonly think about bank bailouts or dropping bombs on brown people as places where the money goes.

      Hey! This is a decent place, take your common sense elsewhere!

    12. Re:$62,000 per person, $156,000 per family by swillden · · Score: 1

      Just at the federal level alone (think just the interstate highways), along with any taxes you're paying, we're incurring $10,000 per person of debt each year.

      Well, you may think about the interstate highways, and yeah I do that occasionally too, but I more commonly think about bank bailouts or dropping bombs on brown people as places where the money goes.

      You forgot social programs. Whether or not you think they're a good way to spend money, or a good reason to go into debt, you shouldn't leave them out because entitlements are a huge chunk of the federal budget. More than military or bailouts.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    13. Re:$62,000 per person, $156,000 per family by amiga3D · · Score: 1

      Don't worry, it's all going to come to an end in less than a decade at current spending levels. It's not hard to figure it out, it's simple arithmetic. Money is not infinite.

    14. Re:$62,000 per person, $156,000 per family by amiga3D · · Score: 1

      I will say that at least with entitlements the money gets put back in play. The Billions in foreign aid are just gone.

    15. Re:$62,000 per person, $156,000 per family by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      The reason it helps your mortgage is because you're actually paying the thing off.

      Not true. If you get an interest only mortgage for 200,000, then in 25 years, you'll still owe 200,000. But because of inflation, that 200,000 will be worth much less, and it would be far easier to pay it off, as your income will be much higher.

      Of course in practice interest only mortages are paid off with investments, but the far that interest has shrunk it remains.

      Public debt over 100 years would have the same inflationary reduction effect * 8.

      For sure, inflation has the other effects you mention. And that's the reason public debt has to be managed. I was just correcting the common misunderstanding that it needs to be paid off.

    16. Re:$62,000 per person, $156,000 per family by dave420 · · Score: 1

      So short-sighted. Every country around the world affects every other, obviously some more than others. Helping poor countries to become productive and safe means the repercussions from their lack of production and lack of safety (wars, famine, disease, piracy, pollution, etc.) do not reach you. Foreign aid is an investment. If the aid costs less than the damage a misbehaving, messed-up country causes, it makes perfect financial sense to pay. The fact you claim the money is "just gone" speaks very loudly to the fact that you are incredibly self-centered and can't possibly consider that all countries affect all other countries (either directly or indirectly). It doesn't make you look particularly clever, that's for sure.

    17. Re:$62,000 per person, $156,000 per family by amiga3D · · Score: 1

      I've heard that argument for decades. I look at what has gone on where we throw money at problems. It doesn't convince me. Maybe I'm just not clever enough to figure out how helping warlords buy more weapons so they can enslave more people is all that helpful. Regardless, the money is gone and there is precious little to show for it.

    18. Re:$62,000 per person, $156,000 per family by jwhitener · · Score: 1

      that's $30,000 per year your family will have to pay back sooner or later.

      Government budgets are not like household budgets.

  26. Please wait here. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    From 'Wired'

    "...A prototype of the train was unveiled last November, with the final version unveiled on 3 June. Tests are now underway with the train on an 18km stretch of track at Yamanashi, which will be incorporated into the final rail line's route, and during testing members of the public will be allowed to buy tickets to ride the train on its short shuttle back and forth...."

    So they don't appear to be specialy chosen. You just turn up to your local station and if the next run is an L0 Series train being test-run, that's what you'll ride.

  27. 510kph is airliner speed? by tota · · Score: 1
    That's right, more or less. Jet planes do just under 1000kph ground speed, propeller planes are usually closer to 500 or 600.

    It's a little bit misleading to be comparing the vehicle's speed: what people really care about is how fast *they* travel, and how comfortable it is.

    For short haul distances, once you take into account all the constraints that trains don't have: check-in and dealing with luggage (at both ends), boarding through a single door (or two), limited cabin space, refuelling, taxiing and waiting for a slot (for both take off and landing), take off and approach vectors at reduced speed, and as was pointed out in the article: the fact that the train station will be in the city centre, whereas you'll often still need to find your way to the city from the airport. Fast trains rule.

    --
    TODO: 753) write sig.
  28. Re:500KPH - but what is the average *journey* spee by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    no, at least my experience in Germany, autobahn, ice or air travel. I've used all modes dozens of times. I'd take ICE every time (if it was my choice exclusively). Closer routes are faster by car, but I can do anything on ICE. Sleep. Work. Play. Arrive at the station 5 minutes before departure. Order a Coffee and snack. Grab a seat nicer than my house 2 minutes before departure. the 2-3 hour trips are the sweet spot. Faster than cars and planes. City Center cordinated perfectly with local transit hubs, I get on my way to final destination effortlessly. Frankfurt, Stuttgart, Munich, Nuremberg, Mannheim. Also to get between these places you pass mostly through shit that is at least as rural as bum fuck Midwest USA. ICE isn't even that fast.

  29. Moving towards the speed of an airliner?? by Crazy+Taco · · Score: 1

    The OP said this:

    500kph is moving towards the average speed of an airliner. Add the convenience of no boarding issues, and city-centre to city-centre travel, and the case for trains as mass-transport begins to look stronger.

    Airliners routinely cruise at 550 mph, which is nearly 900 kph. So I guess trains are moving towards the speed of an airliner in a strictly technical sense, but in reality, even this one, which is not representative of the norm, is still only just passing 50%, so not even close yet.

    The OP also said this:

    The Japanese Shinkansen is now running over 7 times times as fast as the average U.S. express passenger train.

    It should be noted that there are almost no US express passenger trains anywhere in the country, except within a few large east cost cities. In the rest of the country, there are none city to city or coast to coast, except for one, maybe two Amtrak routes that appear to exist only for nostalgia reasons, not for routine travel.

    Add the convenience of no boarding issues, and city-centre to city-centre travel, and the case for trains as mass-transport begins to look stronger.

    Nope, not really. It only looks stronger if your cities are very densely populated AND very close together. Neither of those are true of the average US city. If I'm going from the city center of Minneapolis to the city center of Atlanta, that's 1815 km, and I'm not going to sit around for a whole day on a train getting there. And since the majority of the US population lives on the East and West coasts, what about going from the city center of New York to Los Angeles, a common route? That is about 4,500 km. So yeah, rail travel in the US continues to be a pipe dream that makes no sense. I don't understand why people are so hot on bringing the premier travel method of the 19th century back into the 21st century in the US, when we now have airliners for city to city travel and cars and buses for intra-city travel, both of which make far more sense and are far faster than rail. Rail in the US continues to be an expensive, money losing boondoggle almost everywhere.

    --
    Beware of bugs in the above code; I have only proved it correct, not tried it.
    1. Re:Moving towards the speed of an airliner?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is just not accurate
      In the densely populated Boston/DC corridor, Amtrack carrys a substantial amount of traffic, and, if Amtrack were not hobbled by the freight trains that own the track, it could probably carry a lot more

      Agree that outside of Boston/DC (or maybe by now Portland ME/Richmond VA) and possibly SF/LA, not a lot of places where trains make sense
      On the other hand, if we didn't need oil, would we be spending billions in the mideast ?
      that is a complex calculation - it might be that decreasing gas use, by spending 20 billion a year on trains, might save money

    2. Re:Moving towards the speed of an airliner?? by Fwipp · · Score: 1

      "except within a few large east coast cities"
      Pretty sure boston/DC are east coast :)

  30. Re:stupid germans by matbury · · Score: 1

    Yeah, teh Germans, the French, the Spanish, the UK (only as an extension of the French system up to London), and China seem to be investing is alternative energy friendly, i.e. electricity, public infrastructure. Not only this, with extreme weather events on the rise, flying is going to get more and more difficult. I haven't heard of trains being stopped by wind, snow, rain, etc..

    OK, in the UK, a few leaves on the tracks or a tiny bit of snow make the commuter trains in the south east grind to a halt but that doesn't seem to happen elsewhere in the UK where there's more snow and ice and maybe leaves.

  31. Better than cars by Etherwalk · · Score: 4, Insightful

    > But, I ask, what is the point of a slow passenger train for commuting?

    Two points--

    (1) it reduces traffic congestion
    (2) it still may be faster than driving.

    If everyone who tooks trains into NY drove, we wouldn't have needed a large hadron collider. The Cross Bronx would have collapsed into a black hole.

    The problem at this point is building trains, not that trains don't make sense. It's politically sensitive to expropriate property.

  32. Re:stupid germans by PolygamousRanchKid+ · · Score: 4, Interesting

    will the stupid germans pick up their transrapid stuff where they left it now ?

    Actually, the cruel joke here is that the German rail drivers have been striking now. Which is an important lesson . . . if a train *can* go that fast . . . it doesn't mean anything if something else prevents it from doing that.

    Also, serious info for serious Slashdotters here . . . the Chancellor of Germany, Angela Merkel, has a PhD in Physics. Can any other country boast a top political leader who has a STEM leader . . . ?

    She has a tough job . . . a scientist turned politician! But that is the message here . . . it is not about technology, but politics.

    --
    Schroedinger's Brexit: The UK is both in and out of the EU at the same time!
  33. Old news? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Apparently, this has been done before: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NQyj-3C99bA

  34. No boarding issues, eh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Then why do they have these?

    Posting anonymously because some asshat will tell me it doesn't apply to maglev. Sure it doesn't, until you roll it out on a scale that approach airline density...

  35. Boarding by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    One terrorist attack (Madrid) and lines will be long
    I live in Boston, and every few years take AMTRACK (and it isn't just that it is slow; the litany of problems goes way beyond speed) to NYC, and the level of security post 9/11 is much higher
    I extrapolate that one good train terror event, and security will go thru the roof

  36. Re:stupid germans by khallow · · Score: 1

    Not only this, with extreme weather events on the rise, flying is going to get more and more difficult.

    Asserting it without proof doesn't make it true (sure, it's plausible, I'll grant that) nor does it say whether that increase in difficulty is significant or not.

    I haven't heard of trains being stopped by wind, snow, rain, etc..

    That's because you haven't heard of it. They aren't going to run trains through a hurricane, for example.

  37. Moving towards the speed of an airliner?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    "..I'm going from the city center of Minneapolis to the city center of Atlanta, that's 1815 km, and I'm not going to sit around for a whole day on a train getting there. And since the majority of the US population lives on the East and West coasts, what about going from the city center of New York to Los Angeles, a common route? That is about 4,500 km..."

    Your first trip on a 500 kpm Maglev train would take 3 hrs 37 mins. Hardly a day. The airlines schedule anywhere between 2hrs 30 mins and 3hrs 30mins. And a coast-to-coast would take 9 hours on your figures, while the average air trip is scheduled at around 6 hours.

    Looks to me that the train journey times ARE indeed 'moving towards the speed of an airliner'...

  38. Wrong comparison by Solandri · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The Japanese Shinkansen is now running over 7 times times as fast as the average U.S. express passenger train.

    What could possess someone to think it's ever valid to compare a maximum to an average?

    Compare a maximum to a maximum (500 kph for this Shinkansen vs 241 kph for Acela). Or an average to an average (261 kph for newer Shinkansen vs. 129 kph for Acela). So the difference is only 2:1, and mostly has to do with (1) established rail routes in the U.S. being much, much older so as not conducive to high speed, and (2) travel distances being much greater in the U.S. resulting in air travel being more economical/time-efficient.

    1. Re:Wrong comparison by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Part of the problem is the U.S. is more two-dimensional than Japan. There are more routes to go north, south, east, west. Japan can mostly be traversed north to south, so passenger rail can have a bigger impact. High-speed rail might work in a few high traffic corridors in the US (especially the NorthEast corridor).

  39. Laugh by koan · · Score: 1

    Japan is an advanced technological society with a high education index and strong cultural identity.
    The USA is the antithesis of those things with 3rd World Internet speeds, lagging behind (and dropping) other countries in education and overrun with illegal immigrants that have no desire to assimilate.

    Our trains routinely derail...

    --
    "If any question why we died, Tell them because our fathers lied."
    1. Re:Laugh by dave420 · · Score: 1

      Why should they assimilate? It's not as if the US has a great deal going for it culturally. It also doesn't help they've moved to a part of the world that used to belong to their country not too long ago. Your arguments sound like those of a scared child lashing out at things that upset it.

  40. For those of us in the greater Boston area by jpellino · · Score: 2

    that's 81.6 smoots per second. Not that a piece of track anywhere near Boston could support that.

    --
    "Win treats sysadmins better than users. Mac treats users better than sysadmins. Linux treats everyone like sysadmins."
  41. electricity guzzler by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    500 km/h high speed rail at sea level is an energy guzzler compared to 'normal' 300 km/h high speed rail, aerodynamic drag, and thus energy consumption, goes up at the square of velocity. 300 km/h rail uses, double? the energy of more common intercity rail ~130 km/h. Jet airplanes have the advantage of flying up high in 1/3 atmospheric density, and are optimized extensively for low weight. Maglev will be more expensive too.

  42. French Revolutionary Calendar by Latent+Heat · · Score: 1
    Only weenies and USians still use non-metric months, weeks, days, and hours.

    Those cultures that "have it together" divide the year into 10 "months", the month into 10-day "decades", and measure time with 10-hour days.

    Metric makes perfect sense, and it is a mystery as to the holdouts against metric time.

    1. Re:French Revolutionary Calendar by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There goes that supporter of Napoleon Bonaparte. I wonder what happened to him? Oh, he met his Waterloo...

      The Month-day-year thing is a PITA.
      The rest of the world uses yyyy-MM-dd not MM-dd-yy
      As for AM & PM? WTF?
      There is a thing called the 24hr clock. Oh yes, the US calls it military Time. well, imho the US Military are on the right track. IT is a shame that they are so keen on shooting at their friends.

  43. Re:stupid germans by danbob999 · · Score: 1

    They overtook the French, with their TGV.

    Not quite http://upload.wikimedia.org/wi... The TGV network still has more fast (300+ km/h) tracks

  44. Is that really new? I don't think so! by udippel · · Score: 1

    Though I am too lazy and have better fish to fry in my spare time than running after questionable /.-eds: I do quite well remember having watched a clip of a French TGV running just above 500 km/h some three to four years ago.
    So what's the heck here? I dunno. But we are on /., and 'bloody repeats!' are our staple diet here. alas.

    1. Re:Is that really new? I don't think so! by udippel · · Score: 1

      Hi, its me again, it bugged me too much to let it slip. 2007, so, yes, bloody repeats and lousy editing. Dr. Google gives you a whole list at 'TGV speed'; for example this one: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/T...

      Now don't come and tell me 'Maglev' was different. On the contrary, without rails, it ought to go even faster. Plus, Maglev uses by definition more energy. Nothing against the Japanese here, but this is no more than an academic achievement. What's the point of using a system that consumes more energy for a lesser speed?

      Oh, and don't come to me with the reduction of noise by avoiding the noise of the rails on a track. This has been debunked in the early 1980, when it was shown that the rolling of wheels on rails actually is the main noise component, but only for low speeds, beyond 180 or 250 km/h it is the displacement of air that produces the higher noise components.

      I can only take guesses why the Japanese still try: to avoid the almost completely stonewalled intellectual property around the technological leader, the TGV. German Rail had tried to do exactly that: work around the patents used for the French TGV, at the loss of more than 100 lives at Eschede. I'll surely leave out the gory and sad details of that, however. Promised!

  45. Re:stupid germans by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Also, serious info for serious Slashdotters here . . . the Chancellor of Germany, Angela Merkel, has a PhD in Physics. Can any other country boast a top political leader who has a STEM leader . . . ?

    Not the leader of our government, but my local MP in the England is one of the very few current ones who has a science-related PhD.

    Other MPs have openly mocked him in Parliament at various times for doing things like talking intelligently, raising valid concerns about something, or making arguments based on dumb stuff like facts and evidence.

    Whether or not anyone agrees with this MP's political views, it's a pretty poor reflection on the calibre of colleagues he has to "debate" with.

    She has a tough job . . . a scientist turned politician! But that is the message here . . . it is not about technology, but politics.

    Sad, but apparently true.

    --
    If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
  46. Re:stupid germans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    No, the ICE network is slower, although the trains are more comfortable.

    Regardless, spending so much money to beat air travel isn't necessarily a good idea if that means ignoring local trains, which people use much more often.

    Also, considering Japan's very high public debt, is Maglev really a good idea?

  47. Oh yeah? by Sri+Ramkrishna · · Score: 1

    We pay less taxes, so nyah! That trumps everything!

  48. Re:stupid germans by risom · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Can any other country boast a top political leader who has a STEM leader . . . ?

    Sure: China. Practically everyone on the top for the last 5 decades was a STEM person.

  49. But is high speed rail a *good* public investment? by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 3, Insightful

    yeah, it's called "public investment", each person pays a little bit so that everyone can use the thing, think "public roads"

    Unfortunately, a real and serious difficulty with high-speed rail is that each person doesn't pay a little bit, they pay a small fortune, while in practice only a relatively small number of people will ever benefit directly from the faster travel times.

    It's not a simple thing to consider, because of course others might benefit indirectly.

    On the other hand, other others will be worse off. Again, some of this is direct: building the new HS2 high speed line from London up to major cities in the north of England via Birmingham is going to cause a lot of disruption to some people. In some cases, it will wipe out entire small communities, because going around them was deemed too expensive. It's all fun and games until it's your family home or established place of business that gets a Compulsory Purchase Order.

    And again, there will be indirect negative consequences as well. For example, building HS2 might actually harm our local economy here in Cambridge, because to some extent there is only finite investment capital to go around, and by not being near the new line, our area becomes a less attractive place to make some of those investments.

    But the biggest elephant in the room is the opportunity cost. These kinds of projects commit almost unimaginable amounts of public money -- money collected from a whole generation of taxpayers over several years -- to one single project with limited benefits. You can't just consider high speed rail in isolation. You have to also consider the benefits you don't now receive from, say, upgrading existing rail infrastructure or expanding the road network, both of which potentially reduce journey times significantly for a lot more people and increase freight capacity. And of course taxpayers' money also gets spent in areas outside of transport, like running hospitals and educating kids, where there are always considerable pressures and plenty of ways more money could help. You could even do something crazy like not taking that hard-earned money from taxpayers in the first place and instead letting them spend it on things they valued, thus boosting the economy in whatever areas those happen to be.

    Basically, high speed rail sounds great until you check the details, but it is far from being a clear win economically, environmentally or politically when you actually look at the details. Time will tell whether the HS2 project in the UK lives up to the hype, but "it's public investment" is a long way from a robust argument in this particular case. And just about everything here goes double for the very high speed technologies we're talking about in this article.

    --
    If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
  50. Re:500KPH - but what is the average *journey* spee by godrik · · Score: 2

    It really is a matter of infrastructure. When I was living in france, I never drove a car. It was not useful. Driving was typically not much faster than taking the train. I could go to my university in 45 minutes while driving took about 35 minutes. But that gave me the opportunity to read in the train and to take a daily walk.
    Later I was studying in Grenoble and my parents were living in Paris. To go and see my parents, public transportation (bus+train_tgv+train_city+bus) was taking about 4 hours and a half, 3 of them were in the "main train" which gave me time to do homework, read a book, whatever. The total cost was under 100 euros round trip. The same trip driving would have taken me 6 hours of actual driving (plus pauses) and cost at least 60 euros of gas.

    Now, in the US, it is much more difficult becasue even if you had a good train, there would still be no public infrastructure one you arrive. But I guess you could rent a car.

  51. Do they have... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... an emergency automatic stop system in case of earthquakes? Or any other safety measure in case of sudden derailment?

  52. Re:stupid germans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I haven't heard of trains being stopped by wind, snow, rain, etc..

    Trains stop in Japan for wind, rain, and snow all the time. Trains are no more immune to the weather than airplanes. Just as airplanes can take off in a moderate shower or snow, so, too, can trains. And just as planes are grounded by severe weather, so, too, are trains.

    Also, Japan and Europe don't even come close to the kind of severe weather than the United States has. The US is the severe weather capital of the world. Does it mean that trains can't run in the US? No, absolutely not. But it would require some dedicated meteorologists to make sure that a bullet train doesn't drive into a squall line and get broadsided by a 120 mph gust of wind from a microburst. Custom systems for train scheduling would have to be designed built, and that would cost money.

    Fortunately, Texas and Japan are working together to get an American Shinkansen running from Houston to Dallas, so all these bugs will be worked out, since Texas has as crazy of weather as anywhere.

  53. Re:stupid germans by johnlcallaway · · Score: 1

    Also, serious info for serious Slashdotters here . . . the Chancellor of Germany, Angela Merkel, has a PhD in Physics. Can any other country boast a top political leader who has a STEM leader . . . ?

    And I've known some folks with PhDs that were pretty stupid and had no common sense when it came to many things other than their area of expertise! I knew a programmer who claimed to have a PhD from MIT that was one of the worst programmers I have ever worked with. I knew a gentleman with a PhD in neural networks that was the worst VP of Software Development ever.

    I doubt if Angela Merkel is stupid, but assuming that just because someone has a PhD is 'smart' or capable of doing anything worthwhile is ... well ... stupid.

    --
    I rarely read replies, it's my opinion and if you thought about your opinion a little more, I'm OK with that.
  54. Maglev is expensive by prefec2 · · Score: 1

    Germany developed similar technology, but was unable to sell it to the public for two reasons. First, it is expensive compared to normal tracks. This includes maintenance and construction. Second, it must run on a bridge like thing. A ground based solution is still 2 m above the ground.

    The Chinese tried out that German solution. They built a small line but skipped the extension.

    The French TGV can go 500 km/h but normally runs 300 or 350 km/h.

    In Germany the next generation of trains will be even slower which makes perfect sense, as Germany is densly populated and there are many stops. So hhigh speed would not result in a big time savings
    .

  55. Downtown to downtown by Smallpond · · Score: 1

    Washintgton to Boston

    Metro 30 minutes
    Wait in lines for baggage check & security 60 minutes
    Flight 90 minutes
    Baggage 30 minutes
    Silver line 30 minutes
    Total 4 hours

    Tokyo to Kyoto
    Total 2 hours 12 minutes

    1. Re: Downtown to downtown by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Washington to Boston - 440 miles

      Tokyo to Kyoto - 288 miles

  56. Re:stupid germans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Last time I had a booking on a German ICE the first class carriage my seat was in didn't turn up (maybe they forgot to attach it to the train?), and I ended up having to stand squished in between two other seats for two hours.

    A rare occurrence maybe, but the German train system is not perfect.

  57. Re:stupid germans by dunkelfalke · · Score: 1

    Most of those? Not really. There are exactly two connections that are built for 300 kph: Frankfurt-Cologne and Nuremberg-Munich. Even so, I have yet to sit in an ICE that goes faster than 250.

    --
    "It's such a fine line between stupid and clever" -- David St. Hubbins, Spinal Tap
  58. Re:stupid germans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    >> Can any other country boast a top political leader who has a STEM leader . . . ?

    > Sure: China. Practically everyone on the top for the last 5 decades was a STEM person.

    Not to burst your balloon, but being a STEM person is probably what made China be what it is today. I'd think not everyone being from STEM would be a major advantage to their country.

    Germany has a long philosophy tradition, I doubt President Merkel's main qualities as a world renowned leader come from STEM.

  59. When I jump at high noon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I am moving toward the Sun. It doesn't say anything about having a long way to go.

    Airliners run about 500ktas, and up to 650kt over ground with good wind, which is about 1200km/h. Trains have a long way to go.

  60. Re: But is high speed rail a *good* public investm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's all fun and games until it's your family home or established place of business that gets a Compulsory Purchase Order.

    - What do you mean, why's it got to be built? It's a bypass. You've got to build bypasses.

  61. It's the B & P Tunnel by PeeAitchPee · · Score: 2

    It doesn't matter how fast how fast your maglev trains go . . . until this tunnel in Baltimore is replaced, it's impossible for trains in the NE Corridor to run that quickly.

  62. Re:stupid germans by Kartu · · Score: 1

    ICEs existed well before Merkel came into power, not sure why you are bringing this.

  63. Re:stupid germans by BlackPignouf · · Score: 2

    They overtook the French, with their TGV.

    No, they didn't.
    There is less space per passenger in a TGV than in an ICE, but the TGV is faster ( http://upload.wikimedia.org/wi... ) and safer ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/E... ).
    There are many connections (e.g. Stuttgart München) where ICEs average about 100km/h.

  64. great case! by silfen · · Score: 1

    Add the convenience of no boarding issues, and city-centre to city-centre travel, and the case for trains as mass-transport begins to look stronger.

    Sure, it looks great if you're part of the elite who lives in "city-centres" and travels to other "city-centres" for your corporate, intellectual, and social functions.

    It's not so great for the rest of us whose taxes pay for this, and these things are hellishly expensive.

    1. Re:great case! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      To be fair, the "elite" who live in city centres do pay many times more taxes than "the rest of us" and only a tiny fraction of those taxes goes wowards high speed rail travel, while most of it goes towards social programmes that mainly pay towards people who pay very little tax.

  65. $62,000 per person, $156,000 per family by Kartu · · Score: 1

    Government borrowed lots of money to save fucked up financial system, but what does that have to do with public investment? Public investment does NOT have to be a new debt, mind you.

  66. Re:500KPH - but what is the average *journey* spee by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

    if you have a decent road network?

    Well, that's the thing isn't it. I live 15 minutes from the "middle" of london (i.e. a mainline terminius) by rail. London is a compact city with nearly 10e6 people in the general area. It's hard to envisage a road network able to shift that many people efficintly through such a small area without taking up most of that area.

    Seriously, mass transit works.

    --
    SJW n. One who posts facts.
  67. Re:stupid germans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Huppert?

  68. Re:stupid germans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Also, serious info for serious Slashdotters here . . . the Chancellor of Germany, Angela Merkel, has a PhD in Physics. Can any other country boast a top political leader who has a STEM leader . . . ?

    Belgium's former Prime Minister has a PhD in chemistry. He was replaced last month. Damn you for not bringing the topic up earlier!!

    On a side note, Gordon Brown (UK previous prime minister) also has a PhD but in history, not in STEM, and I'm sure we could find other examples.

  69. Not tust Japan by rover42 · · Score: 1

    China, Korea and many European countries already have large high-speed rail systems and are building more. China's fastest is 400+ km/h from an airport to central Shanghai, but they have lot of 350 km/h trains on longer routes. Compared to other highly industrialised countries, US passenger rail is downright primitive & Canada is even worse. An article on the Chinese system: https://en.wikivoyage.org/wiki...

  70. classic train still the fastest by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think it is quite amazing that a classic railway train still has the top speed record of all times of 574km/h - made by the french TGV.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EOdATLzRGHc

    Normally this train only does 320km/h ;) But it is still amazing to go from Paris to Marseilles which is 1000km in 3h!
    And for all you US-dudes, the acela express around New York is based on TGV, and so is all Spanish, Italian and the English channel-trains too.

    I can't understand though why America (USA/Canada) still doesn't want to invest more in railways. It's so much more convenient and faster than cars!
    Better in every way.

    1. Re:classic train still the fastest by dk20 · · Score: 1

      Probably do to many reasons, but these two stand out.

      1) Our "love affair" with the car.
      2) Our (Canadian) governments love affair with taxing gas.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M...

      Taxes are the single largest component in the cost of gas here, and then the government actually charges HST (Harmonized sales tax) on top of that. So basically a tax on a tax.

  71. Zulu time by Latent+Heat · · Score: 1
    Hey, we are not talking Bonaparte, we are talking Marat and Danton, and we know what happened to those dudes . . .

    Seriously, that is my point. Feet, yards, pints, pounds (yeah, pound mass or pound weight, and what value and units are you using for G?) are human scale units. Meters (metres?), litres, grams, what are those? Those are made-up by some wild dudes in France in the late 18th century, and if you really wanted to scold USians about not "going metric", whatever happened to that fancy decimal calendar?

    24 hr clock, tell me about it. If you really wanted to go G.I., you would schedule all your appointments in "Zulu time", which is pretty much local time for England and parts of Europe but completely artificial for the Continental U.S..

    1. Re:Zulu time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Seriously, that is my point. Feet, yards, pints, pounds (yeah, pound mass or pound weight, and what value and units are you using for G?) are human scale units.

      What! I suggest your read this and then tell me that Imperial Units are human scale. British Imperial Standards were agreed to well over a century ago and are still in use today in only a few countries. Even the British have now adopted the Metric System. As for Human scale please tell me what unit has even approximated the human frame and if you say "feet" please give an example of a human who had a foot that corresponds to the accepted Imperial "foot".

      The Metric System is a decimal (ie. units of 10) set of standards that have been agreed to by international consensus as an International Standard.

      24 hr clock, tell me about it. If you really wanted to go G.I., you would schedule all your appointments in "Zulu time", which is pretty much local time for England and parts of Europe but completely artificial for the Continental U.S.

      Talk about "red-herrings". Do you even know how our current Time Standard was derived and even agreed to? I am well aware of 24 hour notation and actually use it myself for local time wherever in the world I am although Zulu or GMT is useful when local time is not appropriate, such as international conferencing.

      If you don't like the Metric System then that is fine but you and those who don't like it are very much in the minority since most of the world (over 6.7 billion people) uses it.

  72. Re:stupid germans by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 1

    Yes. I'm in Cambridge, and Julian Huppert is currently our MP.

    I'm not sure for how much longer that will be true, because he's a Lib Dem in a seat that can swing sharply from one election to the next, and I suspect the Lib Dems are in real danger of being annihilated at the next general election thanks to some poor leadership decisions in recent years.

    Personally, I'll be sorry if he does go. We don't always agree on policy, but at least he's the kind of representative someone can have an intelligent discussion with and if he does still go another way then he's probably got a reasonable basis for his position. I think we need more people like that in government whatever colour is on their party flag (and fewer people who think the appropriate response to intelligent discourse in government is mockery).

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  73. Re:stupid germans by nukenerd · · Score: 2

    Can any other country boast a top political leader who has a STEM leader . . . ?

    Mrs Thatcher had a chemistry degree and before full-time politics she worked in food technology. But the irony was that she came to preside over the destruction of Britain as a leading technical nation. It sems she hated technology.

    Psychologically, I have seen this explained as, her having changed careers (science to politics), she was inclined to look back in contempt at her former one. A bit like her having made it into a man's world (as political leadership was back then) she famously looked back in contempt on other women. You can imagine her wanting revenge for having once been the lab junior, making the tea for the others etc, as we all did once.

  74. Re:500KPH - but what is the average *journey* spee by Zontar+The+Mindless · · Score: 1

    I've lived in Stockholm for 7+ years, and it's never seriously occurred to me to buy a car. I've rented a car or van a couple of times when I've needed to haul something across town or between cities, but that's been it.

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  75. Re:stupid germans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Also, serious info for serious Slashdotters here . . . the Chancellor of Germany, Angela Merkel, has a PhD in Physics. Can any other country boast a top political leader who has a STEM leader . . . ?

    And I've known some folks with PhDs that were pretty stupid and had no common sense when it came to many things other than their area of expertise! I knew a programmer who claimed to have a PhD from MIT that was one of the worst programmers I have ever worked with. I knew a gentleman with a PhD in neural networks that was the worst VP of Software Development ever.

    I doubt if Angela Merkel is stupid, but assuming that just because someone has a PhD is 'smart' or capable of doing anything worthwhile is ... well ... stupid.

    Sorry but which part of leaders with STEM background did you miss?

    Your totally irrelevant response to the GP make you look like the clueless idiot that you attribute to some of your acquaintance.

    If nothing else the average STEM personnel will have higher "IQ" (if that counts for anything) than the average touchy feely wanker that seems to permeate the western public sector.

    Shinzo Abe is obviously yet another non-STEM touchy feely wanker.
    Maglev technology has plateaued for 50 years with no dramatic improvements in anything including speed.
    The big problem is COST of operation compared with wheeled bullet trains (COST which hasn't decreased in any dramatic way in 50 years).
    This is just a stupid Jap publicity stunt brought to you by touchy feely wanker Shinzo Abe.

  76. Re:But is high speed rail a *good* public investme by nukenerd · · Score: 2

    yeah, it's called "public investment", each person pays a little bit so that everyone can use the thing, think "public roads"

    Unfortunately, a real and serious difficulty with high-speed rail is that each person doesn't pay a little bit, they pay a small fortune, while in practice only a relatively small number of people will ever benefit directly from the faster travel times.

    And you can say that about road and motorway building too. Living in rural Wales I don't get any direct benefit from new motorways or road widenings in, say the Midlands; nor do most people living in Newcastle or Scotland for that matter. I could even do a reductio ad absurdum of your argument by extending it to say that even if I do use a 3-lane motorway, I get no benefit from the two lanes I am not using. Building HS2 is like having more lanes of motorway.

    Whether there is really any benefit in building either motorways or high speed railways is another matter. I have always doubted it. When I see a motorway I am always left wondering how it is that so many people can be in the wrong place and needing to get somewhere else. Usually, when these things are built, people just start travelling longer distances, like my company centralised (closing its regional offices) in the 1980's when a lot of new motorways were completed (the M25 in particular) - explicitly because "travel times were reduced". In fact it took longer to reach most destinations from the central office than it had done from the nearest regional office before they were closed. Staff numbers were not reduced anyway.

  77. Re:But is high speed rail a *good* public investme by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

    The UK roads are becoming increasingly congested, and that can't be cured by building more roads. The CPO and quality of life issues you've raised for rail also apply to roads. But there's also the issue that building more roads means more junctions. And junctions cause yet more congestion. It's not feasible to avoid more than a tiny number of junctions by making flyovers.

    That's why it makes sense to invest in rail. Because every 1.x passenger means one fewer car on the road. It's very debatable whether HS2 is the best investment to make in rail. But the principle of investing in rail is not wrong.

  78. Re:But is high speed rail a *good* public investme by jader3rd · · Score: 1

    while in practice only a relatively small number of people will ever benefit directly from the faster travel times.

    But how many will benefit indirectly? Even if you never travel on the train, having people travel on the train to meet with you, or do business with you, does benefit you.

  79. Re:But is high speed rail a *good* public investme by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 2

    Living in rural Wales I don't get any direct benefit from new motorways or road widenings in, say the Midlands; nor do most people living in Newcastle or Scotland for that matter.

    That is true, but there is a much higher chance that you will benefit indirectly from improved transport infrastructure that helps anything you buy get moved to your local area so you can buy it. HS2 isn't, as far as I know, currently expected to carry much if any freight itself, and arguments that it will free up significant room on the existing railway network for freight by shifting long-distance services have been criticised for various reasons.

    Usually, when these things are built, people just start travelling longer distances

    That is certainly true as a local effect and up to a certain level, and it is therefore something that should be taken into consideration when planning whether and where to improve the road network.

    In that case there really is a reductio ad absurdum case, though. Suppose you can open up an often overcrowded route such as the M25 enough that all traffic can move twice as fast at busy times. You save a lot of time for a lot of people, and of course you also improve the environmental situation (at least, if you ignore the costs of the development itself and look only at ongoing fuel consumption and emissions by vehicles using the road). Would this mean some people would commute further to work or relocate? Sure. Would it mean everyone using the road would extend their commute or relocate their business to cheaper areas outside London and therefore just shift the burden elsewhere? Of course not. People drive to places for specific reasons, and they choose those places for other specific reasons, and neither those reasons nor economic drivers would completely or even mostly negate the benefits if we could move to some hypothetical road transport network that ran with 100% efficiency tomorrow.

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  80. "No boarding issues" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You understand that "no boarding issues" is a choice, right? All the security theater surrounding air travel is just that - theater. There's no real reason why an airplane shouldn't function as a bus with wings, and no real reason to expect that high-speed rail wouldn't acquire some of the burdensome features of air travel.

  81. Re:But is high speed rail a *good* public investme by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 1

    The UK roads are becoming increasingly congested, and that can't be cured by building more roads.

    Of course it can. You might not like the financial or environmental implications of taking that policy to its logical conclusion. (Neither would I, for the record.) However, there are only so many people in this country, only so many cars for those who drive to use, and only so many hours in the day for them to spend behind the wheel. That creates a hard upper bound for the capacity required, even before you apply common sense and make more realistic assumptions about how long people will actually be willing to spend driving even on a perfectly efficient road network.

    I know it's a popular sound-bite, particularly for the green movement, to claim that you can't build your way out of congestion, but such a general and unqualified proposition doesn't stand up to even elementary scrutiny. There is no question that we could do exactly that, but the interesting questions are all about whether or when we would want to.

    That's why it makes sense to invest in rail. Because every 1.x passenger means one fewer car on the road. It's very debatable whether HS2 is the best investment to make in rail. But the principle of investing in rail is not wrong.

    I'm certainly not against investment in rail in general. I believe the most effective and efficient transport system must be a combination of mass and personal transit, playing to the strengths of each where you can/must.

    All I'm saying in this thread is that there are genuine concerns about whether high-speed rail of the kind we're talking about in Japan or less extreme versions like HS2 are justifiable given how much they cost in various ways and how few people they directly benefit.

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  82. Re:But is high speed rail a *good* public investme by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 1

    Right, but there are only going to be relatively small numbers of them as well. Once again, we're talking about enough money to instead make dramatic improvements to the existing rail network, or to upgrade national communications infrastructure to make teleconferences (and remote working more generally) much more practical, or numerous other things that would also benefit exactly the same kinds of people who might benefit from the existence of HS2.

    It's also important to realise -- which many people don't -- that when these new high-speed lines are introduced, they often have a negative effect on some travellers. In a nutshell, prices are typically far higher to travel on the high speed trains, and there is a significant emphasis on booking as far in advance as possible because of limited capacity. However, once those services are available, the existing long-distance routes on existing network infrastructure tend to be scaled back, actually reducing the quantity and quality of the available alternatives. It remains to be seen whether saving an hour or two travelling between two big cities on a journey that is still going to take several hours is really that helpful when it happens at the expense of much higher ticket prices and a general reduction in flexibility in rail travel as a whole; evidence from what has happened so far in places like Europe and Asia is not exactly a glowing endorsement of this strategy.

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  83. Re: stupid germans by MidnightBrewer · · Score: 2

    Youre over-generalizing. Japan has a very diverse climate, from subtropical in the south to New-England like winters in the north. Also, the Japanese Shinkansen stops for typhoons, but not wind or rain. For snow you're talking about delays, not stops. Just as long as it takes to clear thr tracks. There's a difference. And while parts of the Great Plains have extreme weather, they also have excellent weather systems already as a result. I don't think there's real need to blame the weather for not developing to system. And it's not always necessary to go at top speed to be fast enough.

    (I happen to have lived in Oklahoma for ten years and Japan for twelve).

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  84. Re:But is high speed rail a *good* public investme by davydagger · · Score: 1

    Trains built the west, and it will take more trains to bring them back. Mabey Indiana, or perhaps the dakodas can stop being "flyover states" once again

  85. Re:stupid germans by dbIII · · Score: 1

    A gross simplification is that people who worked in manufacturing and heavy industry didn't vote Tory, so Thatcher made sure to reduce the number of jobs in manufacturing and heavy industry. She used the one off North Sea oil boom profits to finance a change from a manufacturing economy to a service economy. She didn't hate technology, and was quite fond of nuclear power, but the people who worked in the area were less inclined to vote for her so they had to go.
    It is a prime example of putting The Party ahead of the Nation, Thatcher showed the world that it wasn't just commies that could do such a thing. Scotland was especially hard hit by the transition which is still causing enough discontent today that nearly half voted to leave the UK.

  86. Re:stupid germans by newcastlejon · · Score: 1

    If only Ming were 20 years younger. He's the sort of overlord I would hail.

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  87. Is it 1968 again? by dbIII · · Score: 1

    Is it 1968 again? Because a high speed rail project from back then has paid for itself many times over. In the years since then it's been worked out in what sort of situations it is likely to work and where not.
    Sprawling suburbia? Bad idea.
    From dense city to dense city? Seems to be working.
    Infrastructure costs are huge but running costs not, so there's a crossover with planes where infrastructure costs are not as huge (but still not trivial) but running costs are staggering. Nearly every major airport on the planet has an oil refinery next to it for a start.

  88. A recent example for geeks by dbIII · · Score: 1

    There's a recent anime called "Rail Wars" (misleading title but trainspotting, guns and girls probably has less punch) which in a couple of episodes depicts a bicycle driven electrically assisted rail motor with regenerative braking - and it's a thing that does exist in reality. That's an extreme example of how little extra equipment is needed.

  89. Japanese Maglev Train Hits 500kph by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Awesome! That's like 80 mph! I think. Converting from metric to normal is a pain.

  90. and the case for trains as mass-transport begins by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    not in the US or Canada. TOO far between stations for piddling little trains to be of much use. Especially at the prices AMTRAK charges.

  91. Better than cars by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > But, I ask, what is the point of a slow passenger train for commuting?

    Two points--

    (1) it reduces traffic congestion
    (2) it still may be faster than driving.

    If everyone who tooks trains into NY drove, we wouldn't have needed a large hadron collider. The Cross Bronx would have collapsed into a black hole.

    The problem at this point is building trains, not that trains don't make sense. It's politically sensitive to expropriate property.

    (3) you can work on a train, or read a book, or watch a movie, or in general do something other than watch the road.

    I commute by rail in the NY area. It is not fast, but for me, spending 3 productive hours a day on a train is definitely preferable to losing 2 hours a day to driving.

  92. Re: stupid germans by Applehu+Akbar · · Score: 1

    When I lived there, "Shinkansen running slow because of wind in Aichi Prefecture" was a common news item. Wind disrupts the schedules, but seldom stops the train.

  93. Re:stupid germans by Applehu+Akbar · · Score: 1

    Attorneys, the most commonly elected profession, are not used to laws they can't plea-bargain away.

  94. Re:But is high speed rail a *good* public investme by Applehu+Akbar · · Score: 1

    In the US, the debate is always over whether the unknown potential of passenger service is worth the cost of a rail project.

    But since freight pays the bills on today's slow railroads (which run at a good profit!) why not design and build for high-speed freight instead? Fast transcontinental freight service could reduce the need for containerships and take some long-distance truck congestion off the Interstates. Once this is done, let markets for passenger service in crowded corridors develop naturally. We might be surprised.

  95. Re:stupid germans by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 1

    Maybe. There obviously are people in British politics today who genuinely want to make things better and have worthy principles to match. There seem to be at least a few in each of the major parties in our various national assemblies, and you'll find others if you look at those who are active within smaller communities and local government. What saddens me is that the system appears to be constructed so that only those who play the game and toe the line can progress to the top, and thus we find ourselves with political leadership who don't seem to have enough bones to form a spine between them. That particular systemic failing seems to be responsible for a great many ills in our societies today, not the least of which is a tendency to chase high-profile projects whether or not they are really the best way to proceed.

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  96. $62,000 per person, $156,000 per family by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And that's why republican's want to pass a flat tax. So everyone pays that back. So the rich don't pay "more than their share." Under current rules, most people will pay much much less than that back.
    Which, for the record, is how I think it should be. But saying each person owes $62000 is alarmist BS. Many people don't earn enough to pay income taxes, so they're not going to be paying much of that back at all.

    Given the income inequality in the US, the right thing to do is for the rich to pay most of that back, since they are the ones who have both benefitted the most from society's investments and they are also the most able to afford to pay it back.

  97. Re:But is high speed rail a *good* public investme by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 1

    I don't know enough about US infrastructure to know how much potential there might be in that idea, but sure, reasonable alternative strategies should always be properly considered.

    For the kind of very high speed, maglev-based trains we were originally talking about, I wonder how much any advantage in somewhat faster movement would really be worth. Presumably the implications for increasing the spec on the infrastructure to cope with shifting much heavier trains would be significant, and you would need a lot of trains to shift the kind of volumes that modern container ships routinely carry, so I suspect when you looked at the facts and did the math the idea of fast transcontinental rail freight might be a non-starter.

    Even so, the modern container-centric shipping industry is one of the most remarkable yet unspoken success stories of the technological world, so it surely makes sense to integrate general developments in rail infrastructure with shipping where there is an advantage to be had.

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  98. The logistics are problematic. by Karmashock · · Score: 1

    These trains only make sense for super dense cities that have heavy commutes from suburbs.

    For any other application they're either impractical or too expensive.

    Over a few hundred miles, airplanes win out if only because they're more flexible and require less infrastructure per mile.

    And under 20 miles conventional mass transit is sufficient.

    And between 20 and 200~300 miles the expense of magnetic levitation trains is only justified if the traffic is heavy enough that conventional mass transit is overwhelmed.

    Systems like this make sense for Tokyo and perhaps New York City. But with the exception of those sorts of cities and in that application it has no utility given current technology.

    What is more, from an urban planning perspective, building such a train to accommodate this application would be counter productive. Such population densities are not desirable unless they are literally unavoidable. Since they are avoidable they should be avoided. No nation needs to pack people in that tightly. Not even the japanese.

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  99. It may change quickly by burbilog · · Score: 1
    considering the amount of time it takes to board/de-board a plane

    Just blow up one of high-speed train and suddenly we'll see the same checks and delays as in airports. Fast train network is not an answer to the problem of long security checks, TSA will happily expand to "protect" trains, sooner or later.

  100. Correct comparison by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    (1) established rail routes in the U.S. being much, much older so as not conducive to high speed, and

    There are train routes in and out of Tokyo, which now have Shinkansen (New Trunk Line) on them that have been in continuous use since the late 1800s. 18, not 19.

    (2) travel distances being much greater in the U.S. resulting in air travel being more economical/time-efficient.

    So.... The trains can run for larger distances at full speed. Great!

    Tokyo to Kyoto is a day trip, requiring me to just take a local train 15 minutes to tokyo station, pay at a machine and walk straight on any train leaving many times an hour. I can come back at night. This is like New York to Chicago. Or Taipei to Hsinchu or even Tainan... oh wait, that's Taiwan. Or Frankfurt to Munich... or wait, that's Germany. Oh well, none of those matter so I guess I didn't take (all of) those trains (just in the last few months alone, just in the normal course of going to meetings and whatnot).

  101. Re:But is high speed rail a *good* public investme by Robb · · Score: 1

    In most cities expanding the road network would cost more and provide fewer economic benefits than improving or building rail services (assuming you have a rail corridor) This is because we have been making collosal investments for decades in the road network so there generally isn't much low-hanging fruit. When Saint Louis was building light rail they basically said, in their situation, that a train line replaces four new traffic lanes and didn't have the disadvantage of dumping way more cars into already overcrowded roads in town where they don't have any more options for expanding roads.

    Most countries spend far more on roads than they do rail and it has very little to do with any kind of cost-benefit analysis. It is simply that there are a lot of people with a vested interest in keeping things the same as they are now because anything else would cause change and uncertainty.

  102. Re:stupid germans by ivothamdrup · · Score: 1

    the Chancellor of Germany, Angela Merkel, has a PhD in Physics. Can any other country boast a top political leader who has a STEM leader . . . ?

    Ene Ergma, long-time president of the Estonian Parliament, is an astrophysicist with a double PhD in physics and math.

  103. Re:But is high speed rail a *good* public investme by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You know, it really pays to do some very basic fact checking before writing a novel. The Shinkansen line is being operated and developed by JR Tokai, a private company, who shoulder the full cost (80-100 billion US$) for developing the Tokyo-Nagoya line. This whole discussion is entirely moot and based on a false premise posted by some angsty uninformed conservative.

  104. Re:stupid germans by andydread · · Score: 2

    here in America we have a major political party that mocks highly educated politicians as "professorial" or "Not a real/regular American" or "Arrogant know-it-all" among other things.

  105. Re:stupid germans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I am actually surprised none brought this up so far. The german maglev trains "transrapid" from the 80s, capable of doing >550km/h have never been set live in germany, mainly due to the cost of the required tracks.
    There is one installation of the technology in Shanghai though, an Airport Express. And while it used to run 430km/h regularly, the trains now "only" run with 300km/h due to efficiency considerations.

  106. Re:stupid germans by cmdr_tofu · · Score: 1

    actually most political leaders in china have strong science backgrounds.
    http://singularityhub.com/2011...

    In the US, we tend to elect lawyers and then businessmen, but hopefully that will change.

  107. Re:But is high speed rail a *good* public investme by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 1

    I'm not sure you understand the practical relationships between government and big business in Japan.

    Also, speaking of basic fact checking, you might like to consider the origins of the commercial operation behind today's Shinkansen. Hint: The original developments were a financial disaster, and got snapped up for the equivalent of cents-on-a-dollar money at privatization after the government had invested a fortune in the early days.

    But it is true that the situation in Japan is not directly comparable to other high speed rail such as European or US networks and their potential developments. The economics, demographics and geography are different, and do make very high speed rail a more attractive proposition in Japan.

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  108. Wait...the US has passenger trains? by RogueWarrior65 · · Score: 1

    I thought the only thing riding American rails are containers full of Chinese goods (going east and empty ones going west).
    Personally, I'm a fan of trains but there are a few things that stand in the way of the pipe dream that is high-speed rail. For instance, have you noticed how many people cheer every rails-to-trails project that comes along? Guess what? You've now borked the land/right-of-way that would/should have been used for modern rail projects. Then, of course, there are the practical problems of trains rarely going where you need to get to and on a schedule you'd like. But the one that makes me chuckle is the battle between the California high-speed rail proponents and the environmentalists. Classic NIMBYs.

  109. What are "kph"...? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is what happens when yanks try to pretend they belong to the civilised word.

    It's written km/h.

  110. Re: stupid germans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Actually, Japan NEEDS to spend on something to combat its deflation and bad exchange rate. What they do when they get deflation there is spend a shitload of money of infrastructure, and I think that's what's happening here.

  111. obligatory subject entered by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  112. Re:stupid germans by Shalhav · · Score: 0

    Intelligence, or even common sense, isn't something you get from a PhD. People who are smart academically, or who are smart in a narrow field, can have some of the stupidest ideas on the planet outside their ridiculously narrow specialty. George McGovern had a PhD in history, but my grandmother had more sane ideas than he did. Furthermore academic brilliance doesn't mean you have any values. Hans Reiser is an example.

  113. eminent domain issues by colonel+spalding · · Score: 1

    The problem in the US and this goes back to Jesse James or further is how much private land must be seized in order to build the corridor. Elon Musk, genius that he is has the right idea, underground. Its the only way. Its almost, if not silly that our corrupt right wing courts have allowed corporations to use eminent domain to take peoples homes to build what is now a vacant failed shopping mall but we can't take land for public transpo.

  114. 570+ kph on Rails by Roger+W+Moore · · Score: 1

    U.S. express passenger train run over old rails / rail lines.

    I doubt they run over old rails at 200 km/h but rather new, welded rails with concrete sleepers. However with modern rails you can certainly reach beyond 500km/h: the French have the record back in 2007 with a 574km/h TGV train. So 500km/h is not really that fast for a special run. What will be interesting is whether they can achieve this for a regular service but it sounds like they cannot due to noise pollution concerns.

    To beat airline speeds you need maglev in a vacuum tunnel. Aeroplanes can only achieve the speeds they do at high altitude where the air pressure is low enough to greatly reduce air resistance. A maglev in an evacuated tunnel could easily reach several thousand km/h in silence. Such systems have been proposed but the cost is prohibitive....still reducing transatlantic travel times to an hour or two would be incredible.

  115. Tiny Country by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Japan is a very small country. Let's see them build a line 5000Km long. Then it will be useful.

  116. Re:stupid germans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And Kim Jun Un is a master of all disciplines, as was his father before him.

  117. Re:stupid germans by Shirley+Marquez · · Score: 1

    Trains do get shut down by weather.

    On December 26, 2010 there was a major blizzard in New York City and other nearby areas on the east coast. Amtrak, commuter rail service, and intercity bus service all shut down, and highways were nearly impassable. Basically it was impossible to enter or leave the city for about a day while the show was being cleared. A bit under two years later, on October 30, 2012, Hurricane Sandy again caused shutdowns of most transit options. That storm even affected the subway because of flooding.

  118. Re:stupid germans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah, the Minnesota Farmer–Labor Party are a bunch of assholes.

  119. Re:stupid germans by Askmum · · Score: 1

    The ICE does not average 300 km/h at all. It has a maximum speed of 300 km/h which makes clear that it can never get that as an average speed between stops. And I don't really see why it has overtaken the TGV. TGV does 320 km/h (LGV-Est), has more dedicated lines and gets higher average speeds because of that.
    As a comparison: Cologne - Frankfurt Airport is about the same distance as Lorraine TGV - Champagne-Ardenne TGV. But the first takes 49 minutes, the latter 36. That's 205 km/h or 278 km/h average (and I believe both are the fastest operating services of both networks).
    I think even Milano - Bologna has a higher average speed than the ICE.

  120. Re:But is high speed rail a *good* public investme by dave420 · · Score: 1

    You acknowledge indirect benefits exist, then ignore them entirely when attempting to gauge the situation (no pun intended)... That's not particularly helpful.

    Environmentally it is usually a great big win as that's about as efficient as mass transportation gets - if you would actually explain your logic instead of trailing off about Cambridge or some problem with a specific implementation of HSR not shared by other examples, you'd make a much more interesting argument.

  121. Re:But is high speed rail a *good* public investme by dave420 · · Score: 2

    There might be relatively small numbers of those, but then they interact with others who benefit, and then others interact with those who also benefit, etc. etc. Pretending there's some arbitrary number of separations before it ceases to matter, it's not really helping the discussion. That's not how benefits such as these work.

    You can keep your sooth-saying, too, as that's also entirely not helpful to the discussion. Living in continental Europe, your comments about "general reduction in flexibility" and "much higher ticket prices" are laughably nonsensical to me. When prices are higher (which is not always the case when compared to the UK), the service is far better. Flexibility is also insanely present - the system of running inter-town/city trams on surface streets, coupled with high-speed long-distance trains means travel is a breeze, and about as flexible as you can get. No car needed for any part of the journey.

  122. Re:500KPH - but what is the average *journey* spee by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you need to go to a city centre, ICEs are great. If you need to go anywhere else, driving is a lot more convenient.

  123. Re:stupid germans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I haven't heard of trains being stopped by wind, snow, rain, etc..

    You should visit the Netherlands, preferably in autumn or winter.

  124. Re:stupid germans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Germany has a long philosophy tradition, I doubt President Merkel's main qualities as a world renowned leader come from STEM.

    I don't think Angela Merkel will become president any time soon. She wants to remain in active politics and her party needs her.

    I think many of her qualities as a leader do come from STEM, but she would not be so succesful if she had only the skills needed in STEM. Being a succesful politician requires many different skills and actually achieving sane policies even more so. The qualities required in STEM are typically those many politicians are lacking.

    Chinese politicians may fall short on other skills. However, I do not think the shortcomings of the Chinese government are due to the skills of their politicians. They are due to the fundamental problems with the system they adhere to (dictatorship, one-party state, severely compromised rule of law, communism). No politician can solve any of the issues the Chinese people face without letting go of those fundamentals. Sometimes, I get the impression that steps are being taken to do that slowly but surely, but the process is so slow that it might very well be that I am mistaking reluctant acceptance of some unavoidable changes for planned, deliberate steps.

  125. Re:stupid germans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Mrs Thatcher had a chemistry degree and before full-time politics she worked in food technology. But the irony was that she came to preside over the destruction of Britain as a leading technical nation. It sems she hated technology.

    It happened during her government, but not due to her government. The downfall of British manufacturing has two main causes. The first is the behavoiour of most of the trade unions, who insisted on unrealistic wages, made flexibility and modernisation impossible and completely destroyed the image of the British industry as a reliable supplier by frequent, long and unpredictable strikes. The uncertaintly and unprofitability also made investments very unattractive and challenging. The other cause is the overall post-war government policy, heavily centred on collectivism. The government spent loads of money on welfare programmes paid for by heavy and increasing taxes (as well as ever-increasing debt). Furthermore, many industries and primary sector companies were nationalised, effectively eliminating any domestic competition and removing the need to be efficient. This made them unfit to compete when trade became more and more global. The Labour governments responded with protectionism, but this only aggravated matters, as it made resources and components for the British industry even more expensive.

    Margaret Thatcher's government could not reverse all that had happened, but it did end the stranglehold of the manufacturing sector by the trade unions and it alleviated the tax burden somewhat. In the end, not much of the industry could be saved but continuing the policies before would have been far worse, not just for the industry, but for the country as a whole.

  126. 240km/hr? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    *km/h*

  127. Re:But is high speed rail a *good* public investme by tehcyder · · Score: 1
    I think the main argument against HS2 is simply that saving half an hour on a trip from London to Birmingham, or an hour from London to Manchester is far too marginal a benefit to justify the huge cost.

    It's not as though people are suddenly going to start commuting from Greater Manchester to Central London every day.

    England is really quite a small country, you don't need particularly fast trains, you just want them to be reliable.

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  128. Re:stupid germans by dl_sledding · · Score: 1

    The US is the severe weather capital of the world.

    Because global warming. Oh sorry, it's called "Climate Change" now, isn't it? And it's all our fault...

    All kidding aside, no one has mentioned the size difference between the US and Japan/Europe either. That, IMHO, is one of the largest hurdles that the US faces when considering more thorough rail service, that could possibly compete with air service. Not to mention the competition for rail time between passenger and freight (read OIL) trains. There just isn't enough infrastructure, and probably never will be, for country-wide, universal service like they have in Europe.

  129. Re:But is high speed rail a *good* public investme by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

    Of course it can.

    I said why you can't, and you've done nothing to address those reasons why not. You just have an empty and unjustified belief that you can. A belief contradicted not only by logic, but by history.

  130. MagLev is NOT the answer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    For so many reasons, MagLev does NOT appear to be the answer.

    MagLev is much more expensive to construct, maintain and operate than duo-rail (conventional rail).

    MagLev is not near as energy-efficient as duo-rail.

    MagLev introduces significant environmental problems that duo-rail does not impose.

    MagLev is NOT readily compatible with other forms of transportation (the structures are much more difficult to integrate with other forms of transportation).

    The incremental benefits of very high speed are greatly diminished, while the costs raise exponentially. At the same time very high speeds are reached, what impacts energy consumption the most relates much more to air resistance than to resistance to rolling (so what's the point of eliminating rolling friction if air resistance is the dominant factor).

    As we move forward with high speed rail, it is very important to consider cost-benefit. While "Buck Rogers" type thinking may excite science FICTION fans, those who advocate MagLev do NOT appear to have their feet on the ground. Let's stick to REAL science.

    The author of this article is obviously trying to mislead readers about the relative advantages of MagLev when he compares Japanese MagLev with American HSR. That is a joke. A much more appropriate comparison would be to compare MagLev with Japan's Shinkansen or French TGV (HSR). Comparing it with our slowly EVOLVING "HSR" is almost like comparing it with Roman chariots.

    1. Re:MagLev is NOT the answer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I should have mentioned that existing duo-rail trains (TGV in France) have reached speeds of 357.2 mph. While not quite as fast as the top MagLev speed record, the difference is insignificant. of course, the benefit of these very high speeds could not justify the cost today or in the foreseeable future.

    2. Re:MagLev is NOT the answer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Another point I should have mentioned - MagLev requires very precise environmental conditions and is extremely vulnerable to many environmental changes. While true HSR also requires precise environmental conditions to maintain high speeds, it remains functional, albeit will not operate as fast, if environmental conditions change. MagLev cannot.

  131. Re:But is high speed rail a *good* public investme by xaxa · · Score: 1

    If you agree we need a railway, then making it high speed shouldn't cost much more than not. (At least, that's the theory. I'm not interested enough to get past all the biased websites and find some facts.)

    I wouldn't be surprised if some people do start commuting from Manchester to London, or working for part of the week in both cities. A few people already commute from Leicester, which is 70 minutes from London. You're sure to get a seat, so it isn't necessarily wasted time. Last time I passed through St Pancras there were adverts for commuter houses in Northamtonshire. Weekly commuting is probably more common. Two colleagues spend the weekends in York and Truro, respectively.

  132. Re: stupid germans by kriston · · Score: 1

    This is true in the US as well. It's rather rare for trains to be stopped by the weather. Delayed, yes, but cancelled, very seldom.

    To say that the same weather that stops airplanes will stop trains is just incorrect.

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    Kriston

  133. Re:But is high speed rail a *good* public investme by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 1

    It is self-evident that if you build enough road then there will be enough space for a finite population of drivers and vehicles. It is also obvious that we physically have enough resources to do so. The road-building question is a cost/benefit trade-off, a matter of what is practical to build given realistic time and money constraints, opposition on environmental grounds, opposition from those who would be disrupted by the work, and so on.

    I didn't respond to the point you made relating to junctions, because you claim without evidence that it's not possible to avoid them in most cases, yet the reality at least here in the UK is that many of the major road-building projects in recent years have been carried out precisely to simplify junctions or eliminate the need for some of them altogether, while others have been widening trunk roads that have insufficient capacity, which doesn't necessarily create any new junctions at all.

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  134. Re:But is high speed rail a *good* public investme by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I hardly think Cambridge has anything to worry about. There are plenty of politicians and landowners willing to protect that patch of turf at the expense of everyone else.

  135. Re:But is high speed rail a *good* public investme by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 1

    Pretending there's some arbitrary number of separations before it ceases to matter, it's not really helping the discussion. That's not how benefits such as these work

    Which, with due respect, is an awfully convenient method of hand-waving away the staggering costs and significant disruption of such a project while demonstrating neither any verifiable level of benefit nor any objective advantage relative to other work that could have been done instead.

    To put this in perspective, the official estimates for HS2 costs are currently £42.6B for the line plus £7.5B for rolling stock, which is in the general region of £1,000 for each person in the working population. For comparison, the same amount of funding could build about 90 large hospitals like this one, or fund the government's entire national road network enhancements programme almost twice over, or fully fund a major government department like Education or Defence for a year, or pay the interest on the entire national debt for a year.

    You need a lot of indirect benefit from a high speed rail project like HS2 to outweigh those kinds of things. I'm not saying it's completely impossible that such benefits will eventually result, but a bit of optimistic commentary doesn't go very far in making the case.

    Living in continental Europe, your comments about "general reduction in flexibility" and "much higher ticket prices" are laughably nonsensical to me.

    That must be a different continental Europe to the one I visit, then, because every time I go the old school trains seem to cost single figures of Euros for a whole day of travel, while taking a single Eurostar journey between major cities is typically two orders of magnitude more expensive. In some cases the latter also require booking in advance, unlike the older long-distance routes that have often been shut down once a Eurostar-style high speed replacement is available.

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  136. Re:But is high speed rail a *good* public investme by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 1

    This is because we have been making collosal investments for decades in the road network so there generally isn't much low-hanging fruit.

    We must be talking about different countries. Here in the UK, road infrastructure funding has fallen about 80% in real terms since its peak. Across the Channel, the French have built as much new road over the past couple of decades as we have in our entire road network.

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  137. Re:But is high speed rail a *good* public investme by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 1

    I don't think it's a question of ignoring the indirect benefits. As I see it, since we can't know what true benefits will be derived without doing the entire project anyway, it is probably more fruitful to consider the likely benefits relative to other options. In particular, one other option is improving existing transport infrastructure instead of building a completely new long distance, high speed railway line.

    We do know that HS2 could only transport a modest number of people compared to the overall railway network, even at its full long-term capacity. We also know that it will offer only a modest reduction in journey time, so almost certainly a quantitative but not qualitative improvement for most passengers. (This is one area where the high speed rail in the UK may differ from the high speed rail in Japan that started this whole discussion.) So whatever indirect benefits may result from creating HS2 are likely to be more incremental, evolutionary improvements in the affected local economies and communities, rather than dramatic shifts in productivity or quality of life. The flip side is that you could do a lot of that with the kind of money we're talking about if you invested it elsewhere in transport infrastructure, and a lot of those projects have much more predictable and reliable long term benefits than the relative unknown of high speed long distance rail.

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  138. Re:But is high speed rail a *good* public investme by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

    yet the reality at least here in the UK is that many of the major road-building projects in recent years have been carried out precisely to simplify junctions or eliminate the need for some of them altogether

    The ONLY way they can be avoided altogether is with flyovers/unders. And other than motorways, they are as rare as hens teeth. A miniscule fraction of a percent of junctions. And that's not changing.

    Widening motorways doesn't create junctions, but it does pour ever more traffic onto the existing roundabouts that most motorway sliproads feed onto. With ever lengthening queues to get on and get off the motorways as a result.

    You talk of projects to simplify junctions. And that's true. But equally more and more junctions with traffic lights or roundabouts are created. Every time theres a new housing estate, business park or supermarket built for starters. Plus wider busier roads mean more pelican crossings are created.

    It is self-evident that if you build enough road then there will be enough space for a finite population of drivers and vehicles.

    Common sense is commonly wrong. There is no finite population. The number of cars increases every year.

    http://racfoundation.wordpress...

    Nor is there an eventual limitation of the population figure, as the population rises every year too.

    And you are thinking about it in the wrong way completely when you talk of "road space". The only thing space gives predictably you is car parks. The road system is a mostly 2D network. And as such it's limited by it's nodes. The bottlenecks are the junctions.

  139. Re:stupid germans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The French TGV system (flanged steel wheel on steel rail) is absolutely one of the very best in the world, and has an excellent safety record. And TGV duo-rail trains have reached 357.2 mph. The difference between the realized top speed for maglev and duorail (steel wheel on steel rail) is insignificant.

    With extremely tight tolerances for maglev to operate, weather can be a VERY significant factor in maglev.

  140. Re:But is high speed rail a *good* public investme by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 1

    A lot of this is getting quite off-topic now, but I feel I have to respond to some of these points.

    The ONLY way they can be avoided altogether is with flyovers/unders. And other than motorways, they are as rare as hens teeth. A miniscule fraction of a percent of junctions. And that's not changing.

    Yes, it is. The current plans place a lot of emphasis on upgrading trunk roads managed by the Highways Agency to dual carriageway and grade separated junctions. If you're interested, there's a list of these projects on the Highways Agency web site.

    Widening motorways doesn't create junctions, but it does pour ever more traffic onto the existing roundabouts that most motorway sliproads feed onto. With ever lengthening queues to get on and get off the motorways as a result.

    And likewise that is why significant junction remodelling works are going on at some of the major black spots for this, such as the bottom of the M6.

    You talk of projects to simplify junctions. And that's true. But equally more and more junctions with traffic lights or roundabouts are created. Every time theres a new housing estate, business park or supermarket built for starters.

    But those are rarely heavily congested, nor likely to become so because as you say they are typically there to serve specific local requirements. It's really the main trunk roads that we need to consider if we're comparing the efficiency of road transport with the rail network and potential high speed rail infrastructure.

    There is no finite population. The number of cars increases every year.

    Perhaps, but any given driver is still driving no more than one of them at once. We're seeing more two-driver households that have two (or more) cars and as a general demographic trend more people are staying single for longer and many of them have their own cars. However, neither of these factors (but particularly the first one) necessarily means all of those extra cars are being driven all the time.

    It's also worth noting that with the general hostility toward new/young drivers these days, particularly within the insurance industry, more people are waiting until well into their 20s to take their driving tests, which will reduce the number of (legal) drivers if the trend continues. At least for the next few years, it looks as though this effect is going to more than cancel out the increase in the general adult population that you mentioned. (This is actually one of the stronger arguments for improving public transport provision at the expense of funding improvements to the road network.)

    And you are thinking about it in the wrong way completely when you talk of "road space". The only thing space gives predictably you is car parks. The road system is a mostly 2D network. And as such it's limited by it's nodes. The bottlenecks are the junctions.

    That is true up to a point, but you are oversimplifying. Traffic engineering can be a surprisingly interesting field, because you get all kinds of perverse-seeming behaviours that actually make complete sense when you consider the actors with their local knowledge making decisions in isolation, but which result in tragedy of the commons kind of outcomes. We see this every time a motorway is congested, when the most efficient way to use the space is to have the traffic slowing down and moving uniformly, but there is always Lane Changing Guy who has to jump around cutting everyone up so he can get there five seconds sooner.

    There are also all kinds of circumstances when the modelling these guys use still makes daft assumptions which predictably result in unintended outcomes when implemented. They just spent about half a million pounds "improving" a roundabout on the Cambridge ring road to make it more cycle-friendly, but because they apparently didn't understand the ideas they were borrowing from abroad and didn't implement the whole system, the

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  141. Intercity trains by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Most Americans drive a lot more miles driving from place to place within a city than driving from city to city or flying from city to city. So, why the emphasis on city to city high speed rail travel?

    When I was a 12 year old boy in the 1950s, I could travel from one end of Vienna to the other by myself. I traveled on slow speed rail, the G2 Strassenbahn (streetcar) to the nearest Stadtbahn (intra-city train) station, then took moderately high speed rail crossing to any part of this major world city, then took the streetcar to my destination. That system gave this young teenage boy FREEDOM that few Americans know. It also freed my parents from the SLAVERY of driving their children all over town. Plus, my school had a bus that picked up every child within a block of their apartment and delivered us home after school. And, on the day that our whole class played hookie, we could travel to the Prater (amusement park), enjoy the day there, and then take cheap public transportation home in time for supper.

    Let's hear it for slow speed streetcar and moderately high speed intra-city rail.

  142. Re:But is high speed rail a *good* public investme by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

    Yes, it is. The current plans place a lot of emphasis on upgrading trunk roads managed by the Highways Agency to dual carriageway and grade separated junctions. If you're interested, there's a list of these projects on the Highways Agency web site.

    There are hundreds of thousands of junctions in the UK. 10s of projects does not make any significant difference.

    It's really the main trunk roads that we need to consider if we're comparing the efficiency of road transport with the rail network and potential high speed rail infrastructure.

    I figured that's what you were doing. Yet local roads are significant. Few journeys start and end by a motorway or dual-carriageway. And people experience most of their hours sitting in congested traffic whilst commuting, most of which is on local roads.

    We see this every time a motorway is congested, when the most efficient way to use the space is to have the traffic slowing down and moving uniformly, but there is always Lane Changing Guy who has to jump around cutting everyone up so he can get there five seconds sooner.

    And what of the M4 bus lane scheme, where it was deemed that using fewer lanes for cars actually speeded up the cars journeys? Having a short 3 lane motorway section between a two lane motorway section and one end and and a major off-ramp at the other was inefficient, and slowed traffic. - The bus lane effectively just became a way of using the tarmac that had been set aside for car efficiency sake.

    Jeremy Clarkson does one of his ill-educated rants on Top Gear, and the politicians become fearful of white-van man, and overturn the traffic experts scheme. Resulting in worse traffic congestion for all.

  143. Re:But is high speed rail a *good* public investme by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 1

    There are hundreds of thousands of junctions in the UK. 10s of projects does not make any significant difference.

    Sure they do. Some junctions carry several orders of magnitude more than others.

    And for the kind of money we're talking about for HS2, you could do a lot more than 10s of these projects. The entire A14 upgrade through Cambridgeshire -- a single project spanning many miles of a major trunk route -- only has an estimated budget in the region of £1B, about 2% of HS2, and this is work that has been delayed for years because of the cost despite a crazy number of accidents, many of them fatal, happening on the existing A14 corridor every year.

    I figured that's what you were doing. Yet local roads are significant. Few journeys start and end by a motorway or dual-carriageway.

    No they don't. But again different roads carry vastly different volumes of traffic. When the M25 was effectively closed a few days ago because an overnight repair didn't set properly, there were 16 miles of tailbacks, across 3-4 lanes, for several hours. That is roughly equivalent to gridlocking an entire small city for an entire working day.

    And what of the M4 bus lane scheme, where it was deemed that using fewer lanes for cars actually speeded up the cars journeys?

    You go with the evidence, of course. I'm not saying building more roads is always the answer to congestion or inefficiency in the road network. On the contrary, as I wrote before, traffic engineering is sometimes a surprising field with counter-intuitive results.

    My point throughout this discussion is simply that high speed rail is in many senses a very expensive type of infrastructure to build, and there are certainly alternative uses for those resources that might plausibly give much better returns. Improving the road network is merely one possibility, and as you just demonstrated, there are useful improvements that can be made that don't necessarily involve building new roads.

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  144. Re:stupid germans by matbury · · Score: 1

    Yep, weather conditions in western Europe tend to be a lot milder than the east coast of the US.

  145. Re:stupid germans by matbury · · Score: 1

    Not only this, with extreme weather events on the rise, flying is going to get more and more difficult.

    Asserting it without proof doesn't make it true (sure, it's plausible, I'll grant that) nor does it say whether that increase in difficulty is significant or not.

    Planes need a relatively stable cushion of air to sit on while they fly. If the air is moving around violently, the planes tend to move around violently with it. The difference in the levels of tolerance for violently moving air between plains and trains so that they can operate safely is significantly large.

  146. japanese train by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fo1kJ5HxzFs