High-speed ground transportation (HSGT)-- a family of technologies ranging from upgraded existing railroads to magnetically levitated vehicles-- is a passenger transportation option that can best link cities lying about 100-500 miles apart. Common in Europe ( The European Railway Server) and Japan (Japan Railways Group), HSGT in the United States already exists in the Northeast Corridor (Amtrak Expands Acela Express Service) between New York and Washington, D.C. and will soon serve travelers between New York and Boston.
HSGT is self-guided intercity passenger ground transportation that is time competitive with air and/or auto on a door-to-door basis for trips in the approximate range of 100 to 500 miles. This is market-based, not a speed based definition. It recognizes that the opportunities and requirements for HSGT differ markedly among different pairs of cities. High-speed ground transportation (HSGT) is a family of technologies ranging from upgraded steel-wheel-on-rail railroads to magnetically levitated vehicles.
The Federal Railroad Administration has designated a variety of high density transportation corridors within our nation for development of HSGT:
For more information, please visit the Federal Railroad Administrations (FRAs) High Speed Ground Transportation Website
willie, no no no, we know very well that congress and trains dont mix real well on the fiscal side of things. now if you were to import some guest workers to work on train stuff,from, ohhhhhhhh say a large country to the west across a large ocean, which is known for making things very cheaply. well, then we might have our trains after all, but only then, and no other way at all.
"Visionaries say the proposed maglev train eventually may whisk passengers the 269 miles between Anaheim and Las Vegas in 86 minutes."
And exactly how many people commute from Anaheim to Las Vegas on a normal day?
That's why the day maglevs become economically practical the first line should be located between Chicago and the Minneapolis/St. Paul area; imagine downtown Chicago to downtown Minneapolis in under an hour!
I smell big, fat pork-laden boondoggle.
BUT...all the same, I'm willing to keep watching and see what happens.
Of course, this will require the simultaneous construction of additional power plants so that the energy required for these trains doesn't suck the grid dry. So, if that gets done, too, then maybe there IS some tangible benefit to the average Joe.
Amtrak is a flop and I doubt maglev would ever pay for itself either.
They tried to do this about 25 years ago and it was shot down then... it always made sense between LA and Las Vegas but the route they wanted to take at the time between LA and San Diego was the problem.
This guy is delusional. First there's the John Rocker syndrome. People don't want to be crammed into a box with people they don't like. Secondly, if traffic decreased it only means that more people will try to drive it as traffic is lighter. I'll hit the third point in a moment
"Think what that means: an immense saving in gasoline, a sharp drop in roadway congestion and a huge improvement in air quality. And no other mode of transportation can match maglev in cost-efficiency."
3) I can drive a family of six from Indiana to Florida on $125.00 worth of gas. How expensive will a ticket be from LA to vegas? They say half an airline ticket or about $150? That means I'd have to spend minimum of $450 to get from one to the other. Probably more. I can drive it for much, much less than that.
Does the business traffic (single traveler) really account for enough share of the road traffic for it to make sense? I don't think so.
Rothschild believes the maglev concept, potentially leading to a national network of guideways, could reduce the country's thirst for oil.
Never in a thousand years. While maglev is a great technology and I'd love to see one built with private funds (although I'm not stupid enough to spend my own hard earned dollars on it) it would never make a profit. Mass transit just isn't a good idea in most places (yet)
Under the California-Nevada maglev proposal, trains would carry about 12,000 passengers hourly in each direction on a typical eight-car train.
So the traffic load on the freeway is more than 24,000 people per hour between LA and Las Vegas? And that many will pay more to travel from one to the other crammed into a box with people they don't like? I find this hard to believe
"Maglev will help make the High Desert a destination for visitors and will generate all types of new business," said Rothschild.
How many people go to Disney world just to ride the monorail? I'd guess the number is far less than what Disney spends to operate it. How many people go to the Dallas/Forth Worth airport just to ride the train there? How many people go to San Fran just to ride BART (The transit system, not the fairy)? Transportation systems don't make anything a destination. They simply make it somewhat easier for people already there to get around.
"And it could make long-distance commuting financially viable. Passenger costs on Maglev are expected to be half the price of an airline ticket."
It would have to be a really great paying job to suck up $150 per day in commuting costs, plus three plus hours commute time, plus car rental (or taxi) costs on one end.
I wonder if this will turn out to be both a money pit and an energy pit. It would be best to see if a private company would invest in such a thing before our government deficit-spends, spends, spends.