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Evacuated Tube Travel To Replace Trains, Planes And Automobiles? (VIDEO)

Posted: 03/28/2012 5:29 pm Updated: 03/31/2012 11:18 pm

Evacuated Tube Travel
Evacuated Tube Travel, where humans travel in capsules at speeds up to 4,000 mph, could be the transporation of the future if Florida inventor Daryl Oster can get the funding.

Some people spend their life watching the tube, but Daryl Oster is spending his trying to get people to travel in one.

With experience that includes farming; marine, aeronautical and mechanical design and certification; and stock-trading, Oster is now trying to engineer the biggest change in transportation since the invention of the car cup holder: Evacuated Tube Travel.

To be fair, Evacuated Tube Travel might be even bigger -- Oster is proposing uisng magnetic levitation to send car-sized capsules through giant long vacuum tubes at speeds of up to 4,000 miles per hour.

The passenger vehicle is pressurized and has plenty of air, but moves through the airless tube on a magnetic track and all movement is controlled by manipulating the magnetic forces that are at play between the track and the capsule, according to Discovery.

That means the approximately 8,000-mile trip from Washington, D.C., to Beijing might take two hours, compared to the 14 hours it currently takes, not counting layovers.

And, he claims, the cost for the trip would only be $100.

Some people look at what Oster is proposing and think of the pneumatic tubes used at banks to transport cash and checks to car customers, but Oster says the real inspiration came from the great beyond.

"I was looking at how the moon moves around the Earth so fast and the perpetual motion that exists with all the planets," Oster told HuffPost Weird News moments before presenting his concept to California state officials in hopes of getting permission to build the first 3-mile track on a state right-of-way.

Oster sees the tubes being routed along current freeway right-of-ways to avoid congestion, but says building above ground will be the most cost-effective solution at first.

"Building across water will be the most expensive part, but even if you go from Washington to Beijing, you only need to build 90 miles of track across the Bering Strait," he said.

The idea of traveling by capsule may sound claustrophobic, but Oster's ET3 consortium claims that the transport would provide more room per passenger than airplanes or cars, and TVs could be provided to "provide distraction from negative thoughts," Gadling reported.

In addition, each tube would be constructed with emergency escape hatches and EMT facilities in case of emergency. Likewise, the braking system would be automatic with multiple backups, unlike, the website points out, the Springfield monorail.

Oster believes ETT is a cheaper alternative to other forms of transportation because it uses lighter, stronger materials. For instance, a 400-pound-capsule can hold up to 800 pounds and says he could get a sample track up in a year that only costs 25 percent of constructing a freeway.

"Also, it will be possible to ship goods and services the size of a single pallet without having to load up a full truck," Oster said.

Oster and his team are selling licenses for the rights to build the tracks and tubes, but says the ultimate network will need both private and public funding. He also plans to start a Kickstarter campaign in hopes of raising funds for a documentary about ETT.

If the project doesn't go, well, down the tube, it could change transportation forever. However, Oster says car buffs needn't worry too much.

"I see this as being similar to how steam power took over the horse during the Industrial Revolution," he said. "People still ride horses, but mostly for pleasure."

CORRECTION: An earlier version of the story incorrectly identified Daryl Oster as Scott Osler.

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Some people spend their life watching the tube, but Daryl Oster is spending his trying to get people to travel in one. With experience that includes farming; marine, aeronautical and mechanical des...
Some people spend their life watching the tube, but Daryl Oster is spending his trying to get people to travel in one. With experience that includes farming; marine, aeronautical and mechanical des...
 
 
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06:32 AM on 10/06/2012
much like EVs, the biggest challenge will be gaining initial public acceptance -- the passenger transport trial will be a great means to that end, but I imagine this will be used for underground / undersea freight years before it is commercialized for passenger transport. best of luck to Oster, the sooner we have this the better.
06:26 AM on 10/06/2012
this is the obvious next logical step for transport after high speed trains / maglev. aircraft and spacecraft are never going to match this for energy efficiency, or overall safety. undoubtedly it will suffer from initial fears like any new technology, but in the long term the public will become accustomed to it, by which time the cost of usage will have dropped, and it becomes mainstream.
expanding any road or rail system today is immensely problematic for the issues of both user and public safety and the huge cost of the increasingly expensive tracts of real estate needed, not to mention the obvious environmental costs of building and operating it.
similarly, there is every probability that air travel will become increasingly more expensive, both in relative and inflationary cost as suitable fuel becomes more scarce.
the health and safety of air, road or rail travel versus this kind of technology is going to be the biggest factors determining how much support it gets from governments, although competing with some the largest global companies will be no easy task for this start-up.
of course there are risks of major disasters, but with sufficient skills and ingenuity almost every possible risk can be designed out, including seismic or oceanic movement, emergency egress or energy supply failure.
06:59 PM on 08/17/2012
The big problem with High Speed Rail as currently used and proposed is the noise. Even a moderately slow train is very noisy, thereby lowering property values considerably along any track. The vactrain, and the ET3 run in a vacuum and therefore create no noise. Beautiful. Efficient. Fast. This is the future for travel. No need to go 20,000 feet in the air.
ThinkCreeps
Seriously, it's time.
04:14 PM on 08/11/2012
What spectacular nonsense.
09:58 AM on 05/17/2012
must correct....it l take 3 hours, 2 to get to Beijing and 1 to get to the tube port.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
FaithIsIgnorance
God is fiction.
10:52 AM on 04/29/2012
"Oster and his team are selling licenses for the rights to build the tracks and tubes..."

And there you have it folks. This is junk science masquerading as forward thinking for the sole purpose of patent procurement.
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ValStJohn
Newsie type...
08:40 PM on 04/23/2012
From Washington to Beijing in a few hours? Well, it sounds great in theory. However, it's the, "Over the Ocean" or "Under the water" portion of the trip during an unexpected mishap (Mechanical failure, derailment, fire, traffic control falls asleep on the job, etc...) that would be of slight concern, to say the least.
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BannedInBoston
Everyone is entitled to my opinion.
10:45 PM on 04/15/2012
I wouldn't want to be tooling along in one of these things at a 4000 mph clip if there was a sudden power failure....
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uniqumm
Hot Snark served with relish
05:21 AM on 04/08/2012
Hardly anyone remembers this, but that's how the NYC subway was "conceived". It was around the time lots of ideas and schemes were cooked up (remember Fulton?). It was a pneumatic undeground tube built in lower Manhattan one block in length. It flopped and was sealed and all but forgotten until someone re-discovered the tunnel in the 80's.

This dream would have passengers in a large "capsule" zip along an immensely long vacuum pipe at HIGH HYPERSONIC speed.

Here are some of the problems I see:

1. This would be LOOOONG distances through geologically unstable areas.

2. Building this would require the GNP of the entire planet.

3. A little glitch such as a small quake, component failure, etc.could cause the capsule to contact the tube, instantly vaporizing the capsule, the passengers, and a chunk of the area around there.

In short, this is A PIPE DREAM!

The Concorde was more practical, and what happened to that?
12:07 AM on 04/03/2012
A childhood dream. But my tubes had no seats. Just get in and fly...
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jf12
When I saw her I marveled greatly.
04:18 PM on 04/02/2012
Yes. It can be done.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
USMC 5831
06:52 AM on 03/31/2012
WOW!!! That would be amazing! Imagine the amount of fossil fuels & emittions that would be reduced. Not to mention cost effective for the average person to afford travel.
11:33 PM on 04/03/2012
Cost effective? Do you think this would be cheap after the trillions of dollars it would cost
to build up front.... maybe you need to get off the tube o' smoke
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Norge
Rolf K. Artist, worker of metal, writer of poems
03:47 PM on 03/30/2012
No, there is not time now before deep freeze. Perhaps after the big melt, though that is a few centuries down the ice.
10:10 AM on 03/30/2012
and the words of Jack Black, in the Tenacious D first album, may one day be realized...

nothing was made mention of the g-forces that would occur at turns- also assuming the acceleration and deceleration would be gradual. i don't think 2hrs would cut it.
02:39 AM on 03/30/2012
Any guesses as to how many times this conversation has taken place?
The World is flat
Humans will never fly
We will never go to the moon
The automobile will never beat a horse
The internet is just a crazy fad
Super computers in our pockets
Rovers on Mars
High power telescopes at the far region of our solar system
Woman voting
Black president
McDonalds billions & billions served
Double backflip on a motorcycle

“People who say it cannot be done should not interrupt those who are doing it.”