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posted by martyb on Monday August 28 2017, @10:30PM   Printer-friendly
from the faster++ dept.

Adjacent to SpaceX headquarters, 25 teams gathered for another Hyperloop Pod Competition. This time the winner would be judged by how quickly they could go down the 1.25 kilometer (about .77 miles) track. On the final day of competition, three teams advanced to the finals and had the chance to push their pod to the limit.

With a speed of just over 200 miles per-hour, the Warr (pronounced Varr) team from the Technical University of Munich handily beat the two other finalists with its small, but quick pod. Weighing just 80 kg (176 pounds) and powered by a 50kw motor, the vehicle was essentially a small electric car built specifically for winning the competition.

[...] At the end of the competition, SpaceX CEO Elon Musk mused that there's no reason why future pods in the competition couldn't hit 500 to 600 miles per-hour on the 1.25 kilometer track. Of course that means that there will be another Hyperloop Pod Competition sometime next year and who knows, maybe we'll see pods hitting the speeds that'll make the mode of transportation truly rival air travel.

Source: https://www.engadget.com/2017/08/27/hyperloop-pod-competition-winner-hits-200-mph/


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  • (Score: 2, Informative) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday August 29 2017, @03:04AM (1 child)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday August 29 2017, @03:04AM (#560644)

    > braking's always quicker than accellerating,

    normal friction braking's usually quicker than accelerating,

    Ftfy. In recent 0-100-0 mph tests by MotorTrend of an awd Tesla car, the accel and decel were about the same below about 50 mph, where the performance is limited by tire traction. Above 50 mph the motor power limit came into effect, so braking from high speed down to ~50 mph was "quicker" than the corresponding interval of accel.

    Any commercial pod worth the trouble will include regenerative braking. In this case the motor power (and motor heating) limits the power for accel and for decel in roughly equal amounts. With proper scheduling a (conceptual) hyperloop system would use the power generated by decel on one pod to accel another nearby pod. Some electric train (subway/metro) systems may do this already?? (not sure) Friction brakes would be reserved for emergency backup--turning valuable electricity into heat is to be avoided when possible.

    For these student-made "test pods" with internal power it could be a little different. If a hard accel heats up the traction battery, then the battery may not be able to accept charge so quickly on the decel, so it won't be perfectly symmetric... With this competition that is based on top speed over limited distance, friction brakes may make sense. However, normal friction brakes in vacuum are limited by the heat capacity of the pads and rotors (or friction rail) -- they won't air cool like typical vehicle brakes. Sizing of the parts in the brake system must take this into account or there will be some melted parts inside the SpaceX tube.

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  • (Score: 2) by Open4D on Tuesday August 29 2017, @02:17PM

    by Open4D (371) on Tuesday August 29 2017, @02:17PM (#560820) Journal

    With proper scheduling a (conceptual) hyperloop system would use the power generated by decel on one pod to accel another nearby pod.

    Given that Musk is involved, they would use batteries, and not have to worry about that aspect of scheduling. And for above-ground hyperloops, the plan was to have solar panels on top, so you'd want batteries anyway.