Hyperloop: Elon Musk's giant blowgun

The high-speed transportation system proposes to shoot passengers along tubes at nearly 1300kph on a cushion of air.

The high-speed transportation system proposes to shoot passengers along tubes at nearly 1300kph on a cushion of air.

Published Jun 22, 2015

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Hawthorne, California - Two years after unveiling plans for a futuristic, high-speed Hyperloop transportation system, technology entrepreneur Elon Musk has announced plans for building a test track in southern California and a competition for prototype pods.

The solar-powered Hyperloop would shoot passengers in enclosed capsules through low-pressure steel tubes at speeds up to 1300km/h.

Several companies subsequently announced plans for pilot projects in California, Texas and other locations, but Musk and his companies, which include privately owned Space Exploration Technologies, or SpaceX, and Tesla Motors Inc electric car company, were not involved.

TEST TRACK

Now, however, SpaceX has said it will build a 1.6km-long test track near its Hawthorne, California, headquarters and host a competition for student and independent engineering teams to design subscale transport pods.

Selected teams would then be invited to test their pods on the SpaceX Hyperloop track in June 2016.

Interested participants have until 15 September to submit an application. Details of the competition, including prizes, will be released on 15 August, SpaceX said.

Musk previously described Hyperloop as a cross between a Concorde jet, a rail gun and an air hockey table. The capsules would ride a cushion of air blasted from underlying skis, propelled by a magnetic linear accelerator.

He expects a 644km Hyperloop system connecting Los Angeles to San Francisco would take seven to 10 years to build and cost less than $6 billion (R75 billion). It would cut the five-and-a-half hour drive down to about 30 minutes.

Reuters

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