10 Hyperloops That Will Change The World

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  • čas přidán 22. 05. 2024
  • Connecting millions of people and transforming economies, these 10 hyperloop routes will change our world. For more by The B1M subscribe now - ow.ly/GxW7y
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    #construction #infrastructure #hyperloop
    Footage and images courtesy of Virgin Hyperloop One, Mid-Ohio Regional Planning Commission, Hyperloop TT, FR-EE, Mark Ovenden, Patrick Gruban, Australian Bureau of Statistics, Toby Toblerone, Mark McIntosh, Andrea Bens, Google Earth, Yang Baosen, Council of The European Union, Toyoaki Fujiwara, EU Observer, Frederick Florin, Daniel Roland, Oseveno, HS2 LTD, Roberto-Stuckert-Filho, Juan Mabromata, NASA and ISS, NOAA, Earl McGehee, Heidi Okla, Caleb George, Daniel L. Lu, Edward Burtynsky, Anda Chu, Bobak Ha'Eri, Transpod, Foster and Partners and DP World.
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Komentáře • 3,8K

  • @ander4163
    @ander4163 Před 5 lety +1724

    The EU loop I think it's near useless. A madrid-barcelona-paris-brussels-amsterdam-berlin-munich would be more useful I think

    • @Donovaan
      @Donovaan Před 4 lety +186

      These hyperloop plans are based on a lot of research. The one in this video was probably the best first option for Europe, considering all aspects. One can't just connect major cities that are far apart. One needs to calculate possible use and if that use makes it viable or not.

    • @negvey
      @negvey Před 4 lety +77

      geography makes it really hard, this is long vast distances that need to go through mountains, water, terrain etc.. all in very safe and economically viable way

    • @Donovaan
      @Donovaan Před 4 lety +40

      Tunnels or will be required in most cases. If you see how many tunnels European countries have built, it won't be a big problem to do the same with a hyperloop.

    • @leonhardpauli5815
      @leonhardpauli5815 Před 4 lety +18

      And from Munich to Vienna and maybe from there into te east

    • @ExploreLearnEnglishWithGeorge
      @ExploreLearnEnglishWithGeorge Před 4 lety +20

      well, it could go all the way from Malaga/Spain to Tallin/Estonia

  • @eskreskao
    @eskreskao Před 4 lety +1607

    5:20 Oh don't worry, Wuhan became VERY influential recently.

    • @Gooseman95
      @Gooseman95 Před 4 lety +53

      Waiting for that comment

    • @michaelcombs6448
      @michaelcombs6448 Před 4 lety +143

      inFLUential

    • @RedWinterAj
      @RedWinterAj Před 4 lety +12

      Haha 🤣🤣🤣

    • @Aniket2712
      @Aniket2712 Před 4 lety +25

      I came here to see any reference of "Wuhan" ... I was so right 😂

    • @mfbe73
      @mfbe73 Před 4 lety +5

      yeah, I think a list involving high speed global connectivity is a tough sell for Wu Wu in the future.

  • @domenicobulzis4397
    @domenicobulzis4397 Před 4 lety +868

    5:23 Wuhan surely didn't need Hyperloop to become influential

    • @Aniket2712
      @Aniket2712 Před 4 lety +20

      There 50 micron "partical" travels faster around the world that hyperloop 😂

    • @boxsterman77
      @boxsterman77 Před 4 lety +12

      Yeah. Maybe we should bypass that city until they get their yucky markets under control.

    • @Aniket2712
      @Aniket2712 Před 4 lety +5

      @@boxsterman77 BOYCOTT Chinese products & services

    • @MinRobCop
      @MinRobCop Před 4 lety +1

      Thinking the same thing lol

    • @Star-Man
      @Star-Man Před 4 lety +1

      Dom Bul I laughed too hard at that I’m sorry 😂

  • @144Donn
    @144Donn Před 4 lety +228

    It is odd watching this at a time when the world is literally shut in and shut down.

    • @Rizzy-Bizzy20
      @Rizzy-Bizzy20 Před 4 lety +1

      Slowly reopening

    • @tr3ybod857
      @tr3ybod857 Před 3 lety

      Unless you are in the US

    • @marcodrodea3263
      @marcodrodea3263 Před 3 lety

      Yes, but it is right after the worst times and tragedies that regions of the world have made great leaps forward.

  • @farrahvee
    @farrahvee Před 5 lety +774

    Lol just need a hyperloop from my bed to the coffee machine

    • @anandsuralkar2947
      @anandsuralkar2947 Před 5 lety +7

      Cool

    • @anandsuralkar2947
      @anandsuralkar2947 Před 5 lety +33

      If i was u i would bring coffie machine to my bed permanently

    • @Luke_05
      @Luke_05 Před 4 lety +5

      glitch gamer smarttt

    • @onotoleiwassermann4801
      @onotoleiwassermann4801 Před 4 lety +12

      In Russia we bring coffee to our wives.
      Yeas, we don't allow them to carry hot things, heavy things, any kind of hazardous things.
      Unlike you, western welfareboys.

    • @bengriffin6170
      @bengriffin6170 Před 4 lety

      Haha

  • @evnejg94
    @evnejg94 Před 4 lety +226

    Says, "affordable" just as Birmingham pops up on the map...

    • @_ABDUL-RAHIM.
      @_ABDUL-RAHIM. Před 4 lety +4

      Affordable for the rich, we hopefully not in the slum..

    • @TomWhitchurch
      @TomWhitchurch Před 4 lety +51

      @@deiniolbythynnwr926 There is no room in the UK for racist's like you.

    • @0s0sXD
      @0s0sXD Před 4 lety +5

      @@deiniolbythynnwr926 less talking, more deporting. Lol

    • @Matt-fh4bk
      @Matt-fh4bk Před 4 lety +10

      Deiniol Bythynnwr racist

    • @jacobsalter629
      @jacobsalter629 Před 4 lety

      Evan 😂

  • @JohnDoe-gw7pu
    @JohnDoe-gw7pu Před 3 lety +74

    hypothesizing about a California route when it’s trying build a train track for 20 years?

    • @herbertant4096
      @herbertant4096 Před 2 lety +2

      Not really, since united state always failing in infrastructure between 1920 - 1960, everyone wasn't expecting united states could be a superpower from 1970, they made owning a car much easier and cheaper, air travel became more common, lots of paved way across the country, don't underestimate

    • @illiiilli24601
      @illiiilli24601 Před 2 lety +1

      the chances of california building a gadgetbahn is greater than high capacity high speed rail imo.

    • @JohnDoe-gw7pu
      @JohnDoe-gw7pu Před 2 lety +1

      @@herbertant4096 nah face the reality the us can't build anymore it's only barely renovating now

    • @energeticstunts993
      @energeticstunts993 Před 2 lety +1

      @@herbertant4096 cheaper? What, paying for insurance, gas, and everything else, makes cars very, very inefficient

  • @tinna7004
    @tinna7004 Před 4 lety +60

    Not only are all these projects pipe dreams, but I especially loved the hyperloop concept through seismically super active Honshu, Japan. What could ever go wrong?

    • @euphoria667
      @euphoria667 Před 3 lety +10

      They said the same thing about building giant skyscrapers around regions like Japan and surrounding Asian countries. But look what happened. Humans adapt over time, nothing is impossible.

    • @masterchief5603
      @masterchief5603 Před 2 lety +5

      @@euphoria667 it's not efficient else would have already took place. + Easy to sabotage, just find a way to get that vacuum tube to have a blast of air and your system fell apart pretty quickly. It's Vunerable and hell as expensive so not worth any money.
      Skyscrapers still have their problems and aren't sustainable means. They however could be solution to Alot crammed space but for that it's not big enough issue Everywhere. It's just that Alot of parking spaces are there.

    • @barutie-patooty6253
      @barutie-patooty6253 Před 2 lety +1

      @@euphoria667 this is a dumb comparison; a false equivalency. The hyper loop is not going to fix anything that we can’t with existing assets. A really fast train can do the job just as well if not better if we actually invest on it. The hyper loop concept has been in the drafts since 1799. If it was actually possible wouldn’t you think we would have something at least resembling a vacuum pressurized tube train by now? Elon Musk is not Tony Stark, stop sucking him off. Also just because something isn’t impossible doesn’t mean it’s efficient or a good idea at all.

    • @theorangeoof926
      @theorangeoof926 Před rokem

      @@masterchief5603 There are two types of skyscrapers, exorbitant super tall skyscrapers made as a landmark and prestige for the country and those that simply serve residential services and rarely ornamental.

    • @DanHarkless_Halloween_YTPs_etc
      @DanHarkless_Halloween_YTPs_etc Před rokem +2

      Well, yeah, the projects are _literally_ pipe dreams, but...

  • @dannyp.6424
    @dannyp.6424 Před 5 lety +131

    Portland, Seattle, Vancouver BC. Oregon, Washington state and British Columbia all are in talks to link all three cities together

    • @nathanruybalid8316
      @nathanruybalid8316 Před 5 lety +5

      Or their could be a connection from the California line that heads through redding, eugene, and salem before connecting to a PNW line.

    • @thegeth4293
      @thegeth4293 Před 5 lety +2

      Hyperloops biggest benefit would come from linking small towns to major cities, for example, hagerstown MD, to baltimore or washington DC, by car its 1.5 hours, with no traffic. With rails like this, you could live in the country, where its cheap, theres no traffic, and little crime, then commute into the city no problem.

    • @TheRebelutionary1
      @TheRebelutionary1 Před 5 lety

      They can call it the Mayo loop.

    • @orangeboy97
      @orangeboy97 Před 5 lety +2

      @@thegeth4293 disagree, they need demand right off the bat to get profit. Once they prove the concept is profitable, they can expand out to smaller cities.

    • @elchefe7701
      @elchefe7701 Před 4 lety +1

      The California Bullet Train is on a good way, so why not!

  • @ravishankarshetty5545
    @ravishankarshetty5545 Před 4 lety +42

    1.Delhi to chennai: via Jaipur, Ahemadabad,Mumbai,Pune,goa Hyderabad,Bengaluru.
    2.Delhi to Hyderabad: via Lucknow, Varanasi, Ranchi, Kolkata, Bhubaneshwar, vishakapatanam.
    3.Mumbai to Thiruvananthapuram: via Pune, Goa, Mangalore, kannur, Calicut, Kochi.

    • @VivekTiwari03
      @VivekTiwari03 Před 3 lety +7

      @Mr Perfect Nope. Delhi-Mumbai is an ongoing project. Google DGWHyperloop.

    • @ravishankarshetty5545
      @ravishankarshetty5545 Před 3 lety +3

      Mr.perfect cheaper work force is now not a priority anymore. Because now everything is moving towards gig economy especially in high populated countries

    • @sanghamitradas6302
      @sanghamitradas6302 Před 3 lety +1

      @@shantanujoshi290 u a shameless person

    • @nikhilsingh4689
      @nikhilsingh4689 Před 3 lety +3

      @@shantanujoshi290 such a shameless person

    • @shantanujoshi290
      @shantanujoshi290 Před 3 lety +1

      @@nikhilsingh4689 dhek bhai joh bhi keh.. idgaf about you

  • @MiguelLopez-lr9db
    @MiguelLopez-lr9db Před 4 lety +32

    I'd love a Monterrey - Guadalajara - CDMX one.
    I mean, there's no way I could afford a travel, but definely this route could be a ver usefull one.

    • @Morrosoy28
      @Morrosoy28 Před 2 lety

      Tijuana all the northern Mexican cities in the desert to Monterrey

    • @javierpacheco8234
      @javierpacheco8234 Před 2 lety +1

      The train is a better option than the hyperloop.

  • @eardwulf785
    @eardwulf785 Před 3 lety +3

    As a retired Steel-Fixer I find this channel a great source for the latest construction inovations. I remember when we had to rely on the Jackers Journal (Construction News)

  • @runewraith1
    @runewraith1 Před 4 lety +321

    A Hyperloop from LA to Las Vegas would pay for itself in a month

    • @Codraroll
      @Codraroll Před 4 lety +41

      For that to be effective, the station on the LA side would require a hellishly large parking lot and the station in Vegas would have to take up a lot of high-end real estate close to the Strip or have good public transport connections. Connecting the two cities is the easy part of Hyperloop, the great problem lies in the stations and how to transport people to and from them.

    • @SuperMatyoO
      @SuperMatyoO Před 4 lety +3

      LOL

    • @cardcounter21
      @cardcounter21 Před 3 lety +12

      Wouldn't earth quakes pose a problem for such a loop? I always assumed thats why L.A. doesnt have a subway system!

    • @Chris.Davies
      @Chris.Davies Před 3 lety +13

      No. It would be the world's largest and most expensive single-use mass murder machine.
      But you're a thoughtless fool - so you don't understand this fact.

    • @grantportnoy.
      @grantportnoy. Před 3 lety +7

      Chris Davies and how is it a “mass murder machine”?

  • @shacharh5470
    @shacharh5470 Před 4 lety +107

    Japan is currently working on a maglev train line from Tokyo to Osaka through Nagoya. Why would they forgo it for hyperloop??
    Also since the hyperloop concept entails personal transport, no line in itself makes any sense, only a network of lines can compete with trains

    • @kristoffer3000
      @kristoffer3000 Před 3 lety +56

      Because Maglev trains actually function in the real world whereas the hyperloop is just marketing bullshit.

    • @macro325mike
      @macro325mike Před 3 lety +6

      @@kristoffer3000 | Marketing bullshit maybe, but then a lot of folks were saying that of electric cars not so long ago. The pace of development of evacuated tube transport, incorporating maglev is astounding and would be like space travel, on earth - but as you claim, maybe all ‘hot air’, or ‘hot vacuum’ but not if they can overcome the engineering challenges along the way - all those student projects in various universities are loving the challenge. Also Richard Branson invested a lot of money in Hyperloop One, now Virgin Hyperloop One... we will see what transpires...

    • @kristoffer3000
      @kristoffer3000 Před 3 lety +30

      @@macro325mike It'll never be reality because it's so deeply flawed from the get go, a tiny hole would make the vacuum impossible to maintain, the heat expansion on a length of tube like that is incredible and we already know what can happen to railroad tracks that get hot, they look like snakes on the ground, it's also incredibly dangerous if there's a leak because the shockwave of air would tear things to shreds.
      It's cool tech but it's nothing new and it hasn't been built before because it's not fit for the real world.

    • @mohit_panjwani
      @mohit_panjwani Před 3 lety +2

      @@kristoffer3000 railroad tracks? Did you compare maglev tracks in hyperloops to railroad tracks?

    • @mohit_panjwani
      @mohit_panjwani Před 3 lety +1

      @@kristoffer3000 it’d make the most sense while being underground, so many oil pipelines can be maintained so why not this?

  • @elijah204.
    @elijah204. Před 3 lety +18

    I would like to see the California line at the end of the vid extended up through Portland, Seattle, and finally Vancouver.

    • @cascadia6260
      @cascadia6260 Před 3 lety

      Agreed

    • @giopadilla
      @giopadilla Před 3 lety

      Screw it make it go to Fairbanks lol 🤣

    • @Jdwill206
      @Jdwill206 Před 2 lety

      That would make way more sense than containing it to just California. Connect the whole west coast

  • @davekirk100
    @davekirk100 Před 2 lety +3

    Imagine travelling at ridiculous speeds through a vacuum tube in a highly geologically unstable region, especially Japan and California. One slight ground shift and you're screwed

    • @lejanz6293
      @lejanz6293 Před 2 lety

      Yes, as everyone knows building infrastructure that can withstand earthquakes is beyond the limits of modern science.

  • @Porkcylinder
    @Porkcylinder Před 4 lety +361

    ‘On the cusp of becoming reality’ within same sentence ‘no funding from any government is forthcoming’ nothing to see here move along.

    • @Telencephelon
      @Telencephelon Před 4 lety +36

      Exactly. Unfortunately a thumbs down for this video. I like mindless entertainment and dumbening down over time, but there is a limit to how mindless I can be.

    • @TartarianTopG
      @TartarianTopG Před 4 lety

      Tired AF 66????

    • @slabriprock5329
      @slabriprock5329 Před 4 lety +16

      Horrible clickbait title. I reported it and I suggest others do the same. Here's what I reported. "Title states 10 hyper loops that WILL change the world, yet the video states NO governments or private companies have committed to or even are looking at possible investment. Then proceeds to detail 10 FANTASY hyper loops that might maybe possibly be built, pure fiction and baseless speculation."

    • @lawrencewei3583
      @lawrencewei3583 Před 4 lety +2

      but it actually is now, it aged well

    • @maximoernestivilaechague9121
      @maximoernestivilaechague9121 Před 3 lety +9

      @@slabriprock5329 I bet your very fun at parties

  • @evanserickson
    @evanserickson Před 4 lety +442

    I'd love to see Los Angeles - Vegas - Salt Lake - Denver - Omaha - Des Moines - Chicago - New York

    • @katjerouac
      @katjerouac Před 4 lety +25

      LA and Vegas are too far south. I think it could start at San Francisco then the mentioned, Pittsburgh, and New York City.

    • @razor3106
      @razor3106 Před 4 lety +24

      Basically one that runs alongside I-80 until you hit Salt Lake City. Could be feasible, most of the land is already cleared, and because it runs along one of the most important Interstates, every town in between would be a valuable stop.

    • @katjerouac
      @katjerouac Před 4 lety +4

      @@razor3106 I think if the line is already coming from LA to SF, why make another directly from LA to west. Its going north anyway. It could go Vegas, La, Sf, and go east from there

    • @edwardg9695
      @edwardg9695 Před 4 lety +18

      It is much more feasible and beneficial to join the cities along the coasts rather than east to west. East to West is optimal for flight. You need to optimize the number of people with the shortest tubes - crossing the country is not efficient.

    • @dougd936
      @dougd936 Před 4 lety +6

      @@katjerouac trying to cycle the homeless by seasons???

  • @DiabolikSilhouette
    @DiabolikSilhouette Před 4 lety +40

    A great hyperloop possibility for Canada that definitely should be discussed is from Halifax, Nova Scotia on the Atlantic Coast all the way over to Vancouver, British Columbia in the Pacific Northwest. This route would make a fantastic candidate for a hyperloop because of the vast distances between all of Canada's major cities and the fact that they are all basically in a straight route along the southern portion of the country. You can go all the way from Halifax, Nova Scotia to Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island to Moncton, New Brunswick to Québec City, Québec to Montreal, Québec to Ottawa, Ontario to Toronto, Ontario to Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario to Winnipeg, Manitoba to Regina, Saskatchewan to Calgary, Alberta and finally to Vancouver, British Columbia. 🚄💨🚇🛤️🔁👍🏻🙂

    • @nachcam
      @nachcam Před 2 lety +15

      That would be a hyper expensive route to build

    • @eclogite
      @eclogite Před 2 lety +9

      @@nachcam yeah, it would probably make more sense to start by linking our major cities using tried and tested high speed rail, which we still have none of currently lol

    • @ProgressiveConservative
      @ProgressiveConservative Před 2 lety +1

      @@eclogite seriously, if we are going to keep expanding our numbers through immigration, at least give us something out of it like high speed rail across the country.

    • @eclogite
      @eclogite Před 2 lety +1

      @@ProgressiveConservative why is that related to immigration? We've been in sore need of improved rail service for decades regardless

    • @nicholaszamelis9471
      @nicholaszamelis9471 Před rokem +1

      Yeah that way all twelve people in Canada get around.

  • @eno3085
    @eno3085 Před 4 lety +4

    I Think there shoud be an idea to conect Central Europe.
    There shoud be 2 Main Routes:
    L1: (Bordeaux - )Paris - Luxembourg - Frankfurt - Stuttgart - Munich - Vienna - Budapest (-Buckarest)
    L2: London - Paris - Brussels - Cologne - Berlin - Warsaw (- Minsk - Moskau)
    And one Connectionline:
    Copenhagen - Hamburg - Cologne - Frankfurt - Strassbourg - Geneva - Turin - Milano - Florenz - Rome - Naples
    So You can get from east to West and from north to south very quickly without Passing Alps or Pyrenees at a long distance

  • @juliensauve9303
    @juliensauve9303 Před 5 lety +371

    I would love to see a Hyperloop going: Chicago - Detroit - Toronto - Ottawa - Montreal - Quebec City.

    • @jonleiend1381
      @jonleiend1381 Před 5 lety +61

      It will take a lot of pumps to keep the air out with all of the bullet holes.

    • @waynehasch5978
      @waynehasch5978 Před 5 lety +6

      Canada's cities lack population density. China leads HSR miles by far more than everyone else combined. Close cities with high population

    • @whodat9890
      @whodat9890 Před 5 lety +2

      me to but it could be better used in California

    • @ihavenoideawhatimdoing500
      @ihavenoideawhatimdoing500 Před 5 lety +4

      Don't forget to throw in Halifax!

    • @andrewvandenhoeven4273
      @andrewvandenhoeven4273 Před 5 lety +4

      Also Toronto is featured at 13:22

  • @l.c.8475
    @l.c.8475 Před 4 lety +25

    Hyperloop has the same problem as monorail, it's theoretically better than current infrastructure, but trains can already run on current infrastructure and gradual improvements are easier to implement.

    • @RIXRADvidz
      @RIXRADvidz Před 4 lety +4

      better for industry because they can take their time making the changes, where as innovators produce the new technology now that Industry will struggle to catch up to for another 15 years. that's why we still burn fossil fuels instead of converting to all solar/wind/wave energy production, if SWW was the only source of energy, you can guarantee they would suddenly become very efficient and affordable very quickly, instead of making the transition over decades.

    • @kristoffer3000
      @kristoffer3000 Před 3 lety +8

      Hyperloop just doesn't work in real life though.

    • @l.c.8475
      @l.c.8475 Před 3 lety +4

      @@kristoffer3000 yup, and even if it was possible there'd be hundreds of reasons why it would fail as a mass transit system

    • @masterchief5603
      @masterchief5603 Před 2 lety +1

      @@RIXRADvidz simply put, meglev exist idk why peeps want something like meglev in vacuum tube. Btw why not just have a connected two ways big engine than individual pods? Wait isn't that just energy capacity issue? Why not have a electric bar line to supply power, oh boi another train 🚆.

    • @masterchief5603
      @masterchief5603 Před 2 lety +3

      Also to be honest meglev project also has good amount of losses that are still happening + it's pretty expensive to place up against conventional rail lines even if working on electric power and they exist. Sabotage is another issue of these loops as it renders everything to stop while railways keeps things going as it is. So for compensation of more speed this all weaknesses and losses are induced. Right.. (sigh)

  • @equinox-XVI
    @equinox-XVI Před 3 lety +20

    An LA to Vegas hyperloop seems like a pretty good option. I personally live in Vegas and have family in LA, so I wouldnt mind the 4-5 hour car ride being cut down at all.

  • @barbaraaspengen9810
    @barbaraaspengen9810 Před 3 lety +5

    This would be a DREAM come TRUE

  • @Romaoplays
    @Romaoplays Před 5 lety +109

    One of the highest quality channels on youtube, for sure. Love the fact that south america wasn’t forgotten like usual, too!

    • @TheB1M
      @TheB1M  Před 5 lety

      Thank you so much!! We love our viewers!

    • @SalmanKhan-tg8hi
      @SalmanKhan-tg8hi Před 5 lety

      Romaoplays my.. did...fand...ame....canj...karon...amra...moron...sel....no...bad...cola....good...cola...balo....porkalar...jono.....u...i....pere...maind...enjo...good.....

  • @NanaWRLD5005
    @NanaWRLD5005 Před 5 lety +54

    Toronto-Ottawa-Montréal. Almost 60% of the population in Canada lives on the east coast, this connecting its cities would help it grow. Plus housing in Toronto is expensive, and less so in Montreal and Ottawa.

    • @corrda1993
      @corrda1993 Před 5 lety +6

      Add on Chicago/ Detroit too. Large population centeres just across the border.

    • @CrystalStearOfTheCas
      @CrystalStearOfTheCas Před 5 lety +2

      Even with hyperloop, there's no way you could commute daily between the 2 coasts

    • @CrystalStearOfTheCas
      @CrystalStearOfTheCas Před 5 lety

      @@camiloportela6399 I totally agree, and it would be worth it! I was just saying that the daily commute option only works for densely populated very large areas with stops every 300km like in the great lakes area, the NYC/DC metropolis, western europe, scandinavia, India,... There you can have daily commute options like Paris/Amsterdam, NYC/Philadelphia,...
      It's not that the very long options aren't worth it but they won't deeply change anything, just a cheaper and slighly faster option, with a reduction of about 30%. The genius idea of hyperloop is that you could catch it in the city centers like any train or subway, with the same amount of processing/wait. If you save 90 mins in wating, security checks,... then suddenly using this mode of transportation for a shorter trip is possible whereas the vancouver montreal trip would still take 3hours

    • @dukenukem5768
      @dukenukem5768 Před 5 lety

      @Gordon Boadi : Said "Toronto is expensive, and less so in Montreal and Ottawa". The housing in Montreal and Ottawa will get just as expensive if Hyperloop gets there, assuming it works. The most expensive housing is always that within commuting time of a major centre, so your idea wil backfire.

    • @thechannelimashamedof2361
      @thechannelimashamedof2361 Před 5 lety +1

      Sorry for reviving an old thread, but why not do the whole Quebec-Windsor Corridor?

  • @dexterford8094
    @dexterford8094 Před 4 lety +46

    5:53 "The Exotic Rooftop Restaurant" LOL

  • @Coltoid
    @Coltoid Před 4 lety +32

    The Quebec-Montreal-Ottawa-Toronto-London-Detroit route should have been included. It has so many more connection possibilities, West to Chicago, south to Atlanta. The B1M always seems to have a bias against Canada.

    • @lorenzopassero8509
      @lorenzopassero8509 Před 3 lety +1

      For sure it would have been better than putting the British hyperloop or the Euroloop, 2 useless (and irrelevant for the rest of the world in Britain's case) things

    • @lorenzopassero8509
      @lorenzopassero8509 Před 3 lety

      @Nathaniel Tesfaye lol, he was speaking about London in Ontario. I've never understood why so many places in the Americas are called like the originals in Europe. Be creative guys

  • @beeasedcentral2471
    @beeasedcentral2471 Před 5 lety +21

    Awesome video! Congrats for the hard work you put into it! Would love to travel by Hyperloop soon!

  • @jefferythomas6079
    @jefferythomas6079 Před 5 lety +18

    This is simply superb..the Golden Triangle in India interconnected by hyperloop ..!

  • @andyrob3259
    @andyrob3259 Před 3 lety +78

    BM1 has gone from being full of good information on actual projects to more a promotion tool for fiction in many cases.

    • @biffsmith959
      @biffsmith959 Před rokem +1

      Agreed

    • @penskepc2374
      @penskepc2374 Před rokem +3

      K foamer

    • @domesticcat1725
      @domesticcat1725 Před rokem +1

      @@penskepc2374 hyperloop _is_ fiction though. You're the foamer here

    • @penskepc2374
      @penskepc2374 Před rokem +1

      @@domesticcat1725 cope, foamer

    • @SkepticalSteve01
      @SkepticalSteve01 Před rokem

      @@penskepc2374n which Elon Musk resuscitates a daffy idea from the 19th century, presents it as his own, and wins the gasps and adulation of, essentially, suckers.
      Four years later we can compare and contrast with a whole deck of non-starter Musky notions and…
      Hey! Strings of linked teleportation booths all over the place would be much better, and only a little less practical than hyper loops!
      He’s a fraud, kids.
      (And this video is a terrible, terrible embarrassment. Should be deleted, ASAP.)

  • @danielt.8573
    @danielt.8573 Před 4 lety +16

    We need to see the hyperloop working first.

    • @jamesbenz3228
      @jamesbenz3228 Před 2 lety

      It may happen in our lifetimes but I don't think it's logistically possible in the near future.

  • @letsoverthink2548
    @letsoverthink2548 Před 5 lety +36

    Pretoria, Johannesburg, Cape Town, and Durban in South Africa would benefit from Hyperloop as well

    • @letsoverthink2548
      @letsoverthink2548 Před 5 lety +12

      @ggg my apologies but I fail to understand the point of your comment. is it a suggestion that the criminal issue is unique to South Africa?

    • @Murklor
      @Murklor Před 5 lety +2

      Agreed. Cape Town-Port Elizabeth-Durban-Johannesburg-Pretoria. Could add George and East London as regional stops as well.

    • @pierreemerick-aubameyang1096
      @pierreemerick-aubameyang1096 Před 5 lety

      @@letsoverthink2548 idk for sure but are people rich enough on that route to make it even close to profitable

    • @letsoverthink2548
      @letsoverthink2548 Před 5 lety +1

      @@pierreemerick-aubameyang1096 Great point. I would be lying if I were to either say yes or no to that question, as I do not have enough data in terms of whether enough people would use the hyperloop to connect to the aforementioned cities, but please allow me to speculate. Looking at the frequency of flights between Johannesburg, Cape Town and Durban, and how packed our national roads become on weekends and public holidays when people drive back home from these major cities (most South Africans only go to the cities for work purposes but otherwise live or hail from rural areas) I would say the market is there. Now if the Hyperloop system can be as affordable as a plane ticket or a full tank of fuel in a typical car, couple that with the re-education of our people to so that they can abandon the car, the Hyperloop system can (THEORETICALLY) be profitable. We certainly do have a road crisis as our roads cannot handle its daily traffic, plus the death toll on the roads is way too high. The only viable alternative that we have is flying, but our flight routes are extremely inflexible. This system would be welcomed with open arms. What do you think?

    • @asandax6
      @asandax6 Před 2 lety

      @@letsoverthink2548 The Hyperloop is a scam. Any engineer will tell you that even the ones working on it know it's impossible to nake a reality. I think the RND they are doing on the Hyperloop is for other stiff like rockets (Or at least I hope that's what they are doing otherwise they are wasting time and money).

  • @FilmscoreMetaler
    @FilmscoreMetaler Před 4 lety +233

    How is any of those smaller cities still "affordable" once it's linked to the hyperloop? Rents will triple the day the hyperloop is finished.

    • @OK-ws7ti
      @OK-ws7ti Před 4 lety +17

      Why don't you close your mouth and keep having no idea how the economy works

    • @FilmscoreMetaler
      @FilmscoreMetaler Před 4 lety +78

      @@OK-ws7ti What are you, 16?

    • @vangildermichael1767
      @vangildermichael1767 Před 4 lety +49

      I agree and wonder myself. Except the rent will not skyrocket anywhere. In fact, rent will become cheaper. Demand will no longer be intense at any one location. Living costs will be more affordable to attract a resident to move there. It's just a thought. I'm not an ecconomist.

    • @MayorofAvabruck
      @MayorofAvabruck Před 4 lety +5

      Buy a house before the hyperloop finishes?

    • @rsjogren
      @rsjogren Před 4 lety +22

      Only the wealthy can afford current high-speed surface lines, like Shinkansen, Acela, Eurostar, so it's complete hogwash to justify hyperloop on the promise of access to affordable housing. Anyone who needs to care about that will never be able to afford to ride it.

  • @ankr3w1
    @ankr3w1 Před 2 lety +2

    3 and a half years later and all of this is still a pipe dream.

  • @sourabhjain3346
    @sourabhjain3346 Před 4 lety +29

    Hyperloop is highly impractical, I don't see it getting materialized with the current technology.

  • @zilverdiesel8562
    @zilverdiesel8562 Před 5 lety +47

    I am absolutely hooked on this channel, I love every video!

  • @ira1420
    @ira1420 Před 5 lety +112

    In Italy it could be something like this: Turin-Milan-Florence-Rome-Naples

    • @Martin-dg7it
      @Martin-dg7it Před 5 lety +3

      Not only Italy. Every country would benefit from a fast transportation system.

    • @gameplayandreview
      @gameplayandreview Před 5 lety +14

      Italy should consider not turning into Greece first.

    • @morganlambley8655
      @morganlambley8655 Před 5 lety

      Martin Kozon and right now that is flying.
      Nothing currently beats it unless you’re very tight knit like Europe.
      Otherwise it’s much easier to build 2 airports and fly between them than one extremely long rail line.

    • @marmavit
      @marmavit Před 5 lety +2

      there's no way that Italy can turn into Greece, it's an ignorance mistake to say something like that. Italy it's still one of the most industrialized countries in the world and also is one if not the most important country for anythign related to style/fashion and design.Greece's economy has only tourism and maybe some little industry.

    • @morganlambley8655
      @morganlambley8655 Před 5 lety

      marmavit that’s still Italy’s problem. Almost everything there can be done elsewhere. The whole fashion and design can be done in France/England/Turkey or America.
      When it comes to other industry, so much of it owned by international countries that they could move the whole operation elsewhere.

  • @jm5390
    @jm5390 Před 4 lety +4

    As a Texan who lives in the Dallas/Fort Worth area, I can agree with this 100 percent. We need a better way to connect our major cities in the "Texas Triangle" than interstates 10, 35, and 45. A hyperloop would help eliminate the need to drive for HOURS between the cities.

    • @gabetalks9275
      @gabetalks9275 Před rokem

      Hyperloop is just a worse version of high speed rail. It doesn't matter if hyperloop is faster than high speed rail because the hyperloop is an individual pod, while high speed train is a high capacity train, so high speed rail will move more people way faster and more efficiently.

  • @dannjrad2109
    @dannjrad2109 Před 4 lety +35

    3:48 I had a fucking stroke when I heard how he pronounced the city of Kyoto...

    • @Bnio
      @Bnio Před 2 lety +4

      Cai Odo

    • @rm689
      @rm689 Před 2 lety

      Nagoya… I heard nagowa? And Changsha …changsaw?

    • @araquejo
      @araquejo Před 2 lety

      I did die for 2 secs.

    • @ELSHELL
      @ELSHELL Před 2 lety

      @@araquejo welcome back to the land of the living

  • @castle4328
    @castle4328 Před 5 lety +67

    Can you also make a video stating the difficulty or problems preventing the ascension of the hyperloop.. what are the technical hurdles

    • @SomeGuy-lw2po
      @SomeGuy-lw2po Před 5 lety +15

      Problem with this video is there's all this hype, and within that hype are people who call any criticism "hate", so the video probably would do bad.
      But yeah I agree, there's a lot of problems, a lot!

    • @gracefool
      @gracefool Před 5 lety +11

      There are so many hurdles that it makes no sense. It can't be profitable.

    • @dukenukem5768
      @dukenukem5768 Před 5 lety +7

      Expense. Anything is possible if you throw enough money at it, but making economic sense is another matter.

    • @khshur2
      @khshur2 Před 5 lety

      @@SomeGuy-lw2po explain ..

    • @yeusean
      @yeusean Před 5 lety

      Money

  • @janekocorek3313
    @janekocorek3313 Před 5 lety +182

    When I was in high school a teacher said that one day every car would have a phone in it. The entire class erupted in laughter and we all thought she was high or something to have said something so crazy. There is no reason this can't be done and most likely will be done. The technology does not seem so outlandish at all. And, as stated below, I believe EM is currently working on something very similar. I about flipped out the first time I saw a 3d printer and that seems way more difficult than a really fast train in a tube. If we don't imagine things, they don't happen. Great Vid.

    • @ant-asd
      @ant-asd Před 4 lety +6

      yup....it's a matter of time.....it will be happened...

    • @hifijohn
      @hifijohn Před 4 lety +11

      Phones have been in cars since the 60's, if you could afford it. its not complicated technology, this is completely different, if they make it work it will be so expense and unreliable only the very rich will be able to afford it.

    • @Skyscraper2015
      @Skyscraper2015 Před 4 lety +4

      Also what is a law in our countries, "Dont drive and talk on your phone" therefore since the introduction of cell phones, wireless phones are very much a standard thing these days. Who knew that a phone could be carried around in one's pocket or used while driving.

    • @_ABDUL-RAHIM.
      @_ABDUL-RAHIM. Před 4 lety +1

      Your class owe an apology to your teacher

    • @joanneusseglio6177
      @joanneusseglio6177 Před 4 lety +6

      Technical difficulties aside, the economics would be grim. The overwhelming number of surface vehicle trips are for short distances. People tend to live relatively close to work sites; few people commute over the distances the proposed hyperloop would serve. Hyperloops would compete with airlines, not cars, trollies and busses. Unlike the showplace transportation systems in places like China, American systems are expected to pay their way. The Concorde SST was a safe, reliable vehicle, but there never were more than a dozen and a half in service. They were money losers from the start.

  • @Willys-Wagon
    @Willys-Wagon Před 4 lety +3

    Thanks for the shout out, and personally I think it would be great for Australia, but I just don't think we are very good at planning ahead. I live in Brisbane, and we been debating a flood control dam here since 74. 46 years on and 2 more floods later, we are where we started.

    • @michaelovendenyoung3470
      @michaelovendenyoung3470 Před 3 lety

      But the loop would be great to have one from Sydney to Perth as well across the nallbour

    • @Macca-95
      @Macca-95 Před 3 lety

      @@michaelovendenyoung3470 No, that would be a fucking garbage idea. It would cost an insane amount of money to set up when the human demand for travel between those two points in relatively tiny.

  • @Jordan-ko7me
    @Jordan-ko7me Před 4 lety +2

    I don’t think people realise how expensive the tickets would be, especially at the start.

    • @ZulcanPrime
      @ZulcanPrime Před 3 lety

      I would expect that most airline tickets would be cheaper in order to compete with the Hyperloop system costs.

  • @NicholasSibille
    @NicholasSibille Před 5 lety +40

    Living in Montevideo it was a pleasant surprise to see the Mercosur loop included! Maybe it could also be a closed loop, since there are many large cities along Brazil’s coast south of Sao Paulo, and it could also connect the popular Uruguayan resort of Punta del Este (a prime destination for Argentines, Uruguayans and Brazilians alike). Great video!

    • @caio5987
      @caio5987 Před 5 lety

      Sure sure lol

    • @julian.castro18
      @julian.castro18 Před 5 lety +1

      I'm argentinian and I'd rather have a proper railway infrastructure and a bigger metro system in Buenos Aires first. Freight and passenger railroads are incredibly underdeveloped thanks to political decisions in the 90s to abandon existing routes which left behind innumerable ghost towns in favor of a container trucks mafia.

    • @felipe_pachec031
      @felipe_pachec031 Před 10 měsíci

      I think a coastal railroad Montevideo-Sao Paulo would be amazing for both countries. It could pass through big cities like Porto Alegre, Florianopolis and Curitiba too. It could even be extended north to Rio de Janeiro, Salvador, Recife and Fortaleza and South to Buenos Aires all the way to Santiago del Chile. Its such a good idea that we could see it become a reality in our lifetimes, country neighbor.

  • @airbirdy8835
    @airbirdy8835 Před 5 lety +122

    *18 km stretch is ready for trials in INDIA 🇮🇳 (MUMBAI-PUNE route). Trials will begin in October or November this year(2019). The 2nd phase will quick start after these trials. Hyperloop is expected to fully start it's services from 2022 on MUMBAI-PUNE route.* 🇮🇳

    • @shubhamshinde-of9gf
      @shubhamshinde-of9gf Před 5 lety +9

      Yes absolutely... MOU is signed for Mumbai-pune

    • @InuKun2008
      @InuKun2008 Před 4 lety +8

      Uh, there is no 18km stretch in India. They haven't even secured contractor bids for that stretch you're saying is good to go (which Virgin is looking for, but hasn't yet hired the builder for).

    • @ironside7527
      @ironside7527 Před 4 lety +9

      @@InuKun2008 Lol what?
      Mate It’s Ready.
      Go to the official website of Hyperloop one and look for Mumbai-Pune Trail Track.

    • @1946vanchi
      @1946vanchi Před 4 lety +2

      Bullet train from Mumbai to Ahmedabad is in progress and already there are doubts about the cost affordability. In all these news casts no one is talking about what it would cost to travel from Mumbai to Pune. It will be prohibitively expensive to afford on a daily basis.already the metro routes in Mumbai are losing money due to bad planning and route selection. What is the cost per seat from Mumbai to Pune?

    • @piyushvaidya5086
      @piyushvaidya5086 Před 4 lety +12

      @@1946vanchi whatever the cost is doesn't matter. Higher Grade Technologies arent built for common people to go on his Ganpati Celebration from Mumbai to Pune. It is dumb to ask whether the tickets will be viable for the general public. My family falls into the lower middle class category. Most probably I wont be able to afford it, and many like me won't. But I understand the importance of such a line. Pune is becoming a major IT & technological Hub, whereas Mumbai is the financial Capital, where many foreign & domestic corporations have their headquarters & operations. Combine the startup culture & higher standard of living in Pune, the financial capacity & global connectivity of Mumbai, the poor transport infrastructure of Mumbai & population paralled infrastructure problem, and u start to see who, why & how the hyperloop will benefit in the long run. China started invest in High Speed Rail when it's per capital income was just 2-3000$(close to India at the time). Today, millions of Chinese have been lifted out of poverty & Chinese companies compete with American ones in just about every Scalable Market.

  • @anthonysanfiz4488
    @anthonysanfiz4488 Před rokem +2

    Seeing that Musk admitted to proposing hyperloop to slow growth of high speed rail, this hasn't aged all too well

  • @matthewharrison62
    @matthewharrison62 Před rokem +1

    3 years later, Virgin has abandoned hyperloop development for passengers. Cannot crack the capacity problem without sets of connected pods, because for safety, independent pods need a long gap. Sets of pods, sounds like a... train.
    Also, maintaining a near perfect vacuum in any length of tube is infeasible. The 500m test track took ages to get to vacuum pressure, and very quickly showed signs of corrosion.
    The Japanese maglev will be interesting to see

  • @max6499
    @max6499 Před 5 lety +34

    Seattle to LA.
    3 major port towns along the west coast. Interstate 5 currently is the limiting factor to the growth of the entire region. Large dams to provide cheap energy and a old and failing rail infrastructure to replace.

    • @CANADAWOOOOOOOOO
      @CANADAWOOOOOOOOO Před 5 lety +6

      Might as well throw Vancouver in too!

    • @carsongbaker
      @carsongbaker Před 5 lety

      Maglev trains are currently proposed between Vancouver and Portland, but the hyperloop had been dismissed as an option so far. No one wants to be first!

    • @greynolds17
      @greynolds17 Před 5 lety

      i dont think anyone wants that area to grow..its already too expensive

    • @danielm255
      @danielm255 Před 5 lety

      Dam Xam Seattle, Portland, Eugene, San Francisco, San Jose, San Luis Obispo, Los Angeles, and finally San Diego

    • @danielm255
      @danielm255 Před 5 lety

      Gerrad Reynolds with that infrastructure it would allow for expansion away from the dense and very expensive areas. Though the best solution is to start building larger affordable housing areas

  • @eyebis9439
    @eyebis9439 Před 5 lety +136

    The Brisbane to Melbourne route would be so helpful

    • @PaulEvansdaddypaul
      @PaulEvansdaddypaul Před 5 lety +4

      Eyebis and a connection to New Zealander

    • @karlw2798
      @karlw2798 Před 5 lety +11

      Plus to Perth! That would be huge. Are they even part of our country? 😂

    • @ayeyebrazorf7527
      @ayeyebrazorf7527 Před 5 lety +4

      That would likely boost the economy of Australia and make it a world technological hub

    • @maniacmitch1
      @maniacmitch1 Před 5 lety +3

      they wont do it, they wont even in invest in bullet trains as they would need to lay new tracks,

    • @anSealgair
      @anSealgair Před 5 lety +5

      The costs of labour and civil works in Australia are major barriers. However, we do know that the cost of construction would be much lower than for the proposed Brisbane-Melbourne conventional high-speed rail.

  • @frontrowviews
    @frontrowviews Před 2 lety +1

    I think instead of the EU loop you propose here splitting the EU up into 3 or 4 lines would make more sense. Here are some ideas for lines I had:
    Route 1 (western North-South line):
    Warsaw - Berlin - Rotterdam/The Hague - Antwerp - Brussels - Paris - Bordeaux - Bilbao - Madrid - Lisbon
    Route 2 (West-East line):
    Manchester - London - Paris - Zurich - Innsbruck - Vienna - Budapest
    Route 3 (eastern North-South line):
    Copenhagen - Hamburg - Berlin - Prague - Vienna - Zagreb - Sarajevo - Tirana - Athens
    Route 4 (Baltic-Italian line):
    Helsinki - Tallinn - Riga - Vilnius - Warsaw - Vienna - Venice - Rome
    Hubs of these lines would become: Paris, Berlin, Warsaw and Vienna
    I know most of these lines are likely geopolitically not feasible but it was a fun idea :)

  • @jon134a
    @jon134a Před 4 lety +2

    San Diego to San Francisco via Los Angeles and Fresno. Hope this HYPERLOOP is happening for us.

    • @davidfares359
      @davidfares359 Před 3 lety

      That would be awesome. Eventually maybe going San Diego all the way to Seattle.

  • @Septiccatgaming
    @Septiccatgaming Před 4 lety +57

    Could you imagine living in Melbourne and then getting up at 5:30 in the morning to catch a hyper loop to Brisbane for work? Also, I think you could’ve made an honorable mentions list with a Midwest hyperloop. It could connect Cleveland, Detroit, Indianapolis, Chicago, Milwaukee, and the twin cities.

    • @affenket
      @affenket Před 2 lety +4

      Haha I don’t think too many Melbournians would want to commute to Brisbane/Queensland at all.

    • @serenity6281
      @serenity6281 Před 2 lety +4

      @@affenket they do now

    • @5688gamble
      @5688gamble Před rokem +3

      No, hyperloop is not possible with current technology and would be a safety and logistics nightmare. It would be too expensive for the average commuter and commuting such large distances is an incredible waste of resources no matter who it is doing it or how, ive nearer where you work, remote meetings, etc, minimize travel. You don't want people commuting over 2000km regularly, it is a stupid idea, a highspeed railway is there for essential journeys and occasional pleasure journeys, but freight is where such a railway would really shine in wide open countries like Aus/US by replacing polluting road/air freight while being quicker than sea and allowing for deliveries inland.

    • @theorangeoof926
      @theorangeoof926 Před rokem

      @@5688gamble Indeed, Australia has unfortunately put off the VFT idea and subsequent variants off for too long and now waste money on feasibility studies, if HSR can’t get it’s wheels going, Maglev and Hyperloop probably won’t.

  • @jayc222
    @jayc222 Před 5 lety +9

    Vancouver - Seattle - Tacoma - Portland - Salem
    Milwaukee - Chicago - Toledo - Detroit - Toronto

  • @mitchellreece7086
    @mitchellreece7086 Před 2 lety

    I'm from Newcastle and there is nothing more exciting than travelling from my city to either Melbourne or Brisbane in this mode of transport, the opportunities would be limitless, the video also showed Newcastle which is pretty cool. (At 2:48 and is a very old photo!)

  • @ainzooalgown7589
    @ainzooalgown7589 Před 2 lety +1

    Thunderf00t has a series of videos debunking Hyperloop and concluded Hyperloop is a pipe dream.

  • @buddi3975
    @buddi3975 Před 4 lety +66

    ahh the famous yang tee zee river

    • @MPfeifer716
      @MPfeifer716 Před 4 lety +3

      Was looking to see if I'd be the first, but you beat me to it!

    • @viharsarok
      @viharsarok Před 4 lety +3

      I was rofling, too!

  • @deep.space.12
    @deep.space.12 Před 4 lety +24

    The argument for most of these routes is about cheaper housing. But then first of all you will be connecting city centers which won't be cheap anyway, and second, as soon as the loop's being built housing price will skyrocket making the local population unable to afford it.

    • @jamesbenz3228
      @jamesbenz3228 Před 2 lety +1

      Yeh. Just buy real estate right before it explodes in price. Ezpz

    • @srs6461
      @srs6461 Před 2 lety +2

      You act like that isn’t happening currently without any loop.

  • @nickvanoirschot7733
    @nickvanoirschot7733 Před 3 lety +1

    Should make a Canadian east corridor to connect Quebec City, Montreal, Ottawa, Toronto/Hamilton and maybe even Detroit. Would be cool too if the line branched in Montreal to meet New York or Boston.

  • @itzjadencr3202
    @itzjadencr3202 Před 3 lety +1

    Other Good Routes Could Be:
    .London-Birmingham-Manchester-Glasgow-Belfast-Dublin
    .Dublin-Cardiff-London-Paris-Nice
    .Seoul-Busan-Fukuoka-Kitakyushu-Hiroshima-Okayama-Kobe-Osaka-Kyoto-Nagoya-Yokohama-Tokyo
    .Brisbane-Gold Coast-Newcastle-Sydney-Canberra-Melbourne-Adelaide-Perth
    .Sydney-Canberra-Melbourne-Hobart
    .Cape Town-Bloemfontein-Johannesburg-Pretoria
    .Oslo-Bergen-Trondheim-Bodø-Tromsø
    .Oslo-Gothenburg-Malmo(Copenhagen)-Stockholm-Turku-Helsinki
    .Helsinki-Tallinn-Riga-Villunis-Warsaw

  • @bobdickweed
    @bobdickweed Před 5 lety +65

    Hyperloop without the Hype is a Maglev

    • @jenimarai1906
      @jenimarai1906 Před 5 lety +5

      Lol, Hyper loop is 1000km/hr.
      Maglev Max 300-400/hr.
      & Technical Specification is Far More needed in HYPERLOOP.

    • @arghya4NE
      @arghya4NE Před 5 lety

      @Audun Børve F to pay respects...an absolute fucking legend

    • @arghya4NE
      @arghya4NE Před 5 lety +2

      @@jenimarai1906 *whisper* its a joke jenima

    • @gracefool
      @gracefool Před 4 lety +2

      Nah hyperloop without the hype is nothing. It's nonsense, can never be economical.

  • @davidlopezlive
    @davidlopezlive Před 5 lety +36

    Canada has got to be one of the most disconnected countries in the world. Specially from East to West. We need a Hyperloop system ASAP

    • @monkeymirror
      @monkeymirror Před 4 lety +4

      David Lopez Yes, we like it that way. Keeps all the mindless tourists out.

    • @ishandey6061
      @ishandey6061 Před 4 lety

      I mean Canada has a tiny population, so really, it doesn't need Hyperloop ASAP. I am not saying that Canada doesn't deserve it, I just don't see it making much sense in terms of logistics.

    • @sweetdreamer3352
      @sweetdreamer3352 Před 2 lety

      @@monkeymirror lol 😂😂😂

    • @javierpacheco8234
      @javierpacheco8234 Před 2 lety

      Invest on a train that is so much better.

  • @Anonymous-tf7cg
    @Anonymous-tf7cg Před 4 lety +2

    I would LOVE a hyperloop that connects California’s major cities it would make it so much easier and faster to visit family here

  • @xijinping-5733
    @xijinping-5733 Před 3 lety +2

    I would love to connect lahore and karachi to UAE and new York, and big European cities , start from Karachi and cover all cities of Pakistan and villages of Pakistan

  • @amnvkr1270
    @amnvkr1270 Před 5 lety +92

    Mexico City - Querétaro - León - Guadalajara

    • @fszocelotl
      @fszocelotl Před 5 lety +2

      Esa ruta es ideal. Poríamos agregar en un extremo a Puerto Vallarta y Nayarit y en el otro Puebla y el puerto de Veracruz para que quede una ruta del Golfo al Pacífico.

    • @Monket2k
      @Monket2k Před 5 lety

      Esa ruta está planeada, también de la CDMX a Nuevo Laredo y probablemente conectando con el hiperloop en San Antonio, Texas.

  • @martinae8601
    @martinae8601 Před 5 lety +84

    Eoroloop is questionable, since it connects some rather small cities and would mostly help politicians. Would make more sense to connect Amsterdam - Brussels and Bonn - Dortmund and then connect it to London and Paris...

    • @caio5987
      @caio5987 Před 5 lety +14

      Martin Aerni yep
      Just not worth even considering this crap in Europe... our trains are already good enough, you don’t need to waste resources just to cut 30 minutes from a journey

    • @koppadasao
      @koppadasao Před 5 lety +2

      Oh, let the MEPs build their own private Hyperloop. Then we can wait for the project to blow up in their brainless heads, and see all those politicians buy the farm

    • @karlcarloshuderz
      @karlcarloshuderz Před 5 lety +9

      The EU-loop does not make sense. This are most very small cities, only 'political' power. Also the EU has 500 million people, while US only people. So the EU will have about 3 hyperloops in your study. There are 2 big metropolean regions called blue banana and yellow banana. One is from London, Amsterdam, Germany west cities, then south to Italy metropolian region in Madrid and way down to Rome. Another one would be in eastern europa connecting this region to the west most likely trough Austria. And last a northern line, which connects this area far away with the other two lines most likely in Germany. The most big advantage of the EU over US is the small distances, which is far more attractive for connecting the whole EU with 3 hyperloops - west (including south), east and north region.

    • @magnificentgoldenbeast6099
      @magnificentgoldenbeast6099 Před 5 lety +3

      Government doesn't solve problems. Free market capitalism does. Vacuum tube trains are a government project and will fail before the first tube ever sucks.

    • @dannyq2275
      @dannyq2275 Před 5 lety +1

      Yeah! I think its stupid they should just do it within their country its way better that way.

  • @jamesatkins7592
    @jamesatkins7592 Před 3 lety +3

    There's probably a reason why a few of these projects have been dropped in the past. It would be interesting to see a full cost benefit analysis and other things; regions effected, initial investment, running cost, scientific development, maintenance, environmental effects, safety. I'm sure many are just waiting to see how the first commercial hyperloop works out

    • @stellaoh9217
      @stellaoh9217 Před rokem +1

      LOL. Hyperloop was obviously never possible...only idiots believed the hype...

  • @louisjohnson3755
    @louisjohnson3755 Před 3 lety +4

    I think these cities should have railways connecting with each other: Minneapolis, Milwaukee and chicago

  • @kasperswag6385
    @kasperswag6385 Před 5 lety +12

    Maybe a Scandinavian route? Aalborg-Aarhus-Copenhagen-Malmø-Stockholm-Oslo-Bergen

    • @Lofwyrf
      @Lofwyrf Před 4 lety +1

      Take Hamburg Into it.. so you get a route from Central Europe to Skandinavia!

    • @davidtudorwehr7573
      @davidtudorwehr7573 Před 4 lety

      too few people live there

  • @jimmybewit
    @jimmybewit Před 5 lety +67

    This channel is so badass honestly

  • @drunkdriving_germany
    @drunkdriving_germany Před 3 lety +2

    I need a hyperloop to my pizza store, and that's everything

  • @theonesillyboy
    @theonesillyboy Před 3 lety +16

    connecting big cities with super fast trains makes perfect sense, much more than 50,000 flights do. however, I doubt that the ticket prices would be low enough to enable moving to cheaper areas and travel for work regularly using hyperloop. in London, moving to zone 6 lowers your rental by, say £150 a month versus zone 3, but the travelcard will cost you the same £150 extra, so you end up back to square one...

    • @katherinegarlock2249
      @katherinegarlock2249 Před 2 lety +1

      I think would even do the opposite. Since it would be more viable to live further outside the urban centers, at least some people with the money to afford the ticket would move further away from the city, decreasing the demand for high-end housing in the city. Thus, housing prices in those cities would level off, making it more affordable, but it would also increase prices further out, causing a migration.

  • @indraprakashsingha
    @indraprakashsingha Před 5 lety +39

    Delhi, Mumbai & Kolkata. 5:34 🇮🇳

    • @rbanerjee605
      @rbanerjee605 Před 5 lety +8

      Hey, shut up, the country is still bad at the core. The sugarcoating won’t help a rotten centre. The countries focus should be on the people, education and housing not these layered improvements.

    • @Ram-wu6xv
      @Ram-wu6xv Před 5 lety +12

      @@rbanerjee605 oh we are focusing on everything and give us sometime just 4 years ago we got independence

    • @rbanerjee605
      @rbanerjee605 Před 5 lety

      Praful chandravanshi please get your facts right.

    • @Ram-wu6xv
      @Ram-wu6xv Před 5 lety +12

      @@rbanerjee605 trust m only 4 years ago we got independence

    • @rbanerjee605
      @rbanerjee605 Před 5 lety +2

      Praful chandravanshi and finally, you are trying to say that India gained independence in 1947 whilst Singapore gained independence in 1965 and Hong Kong in 1999. These countries seem to have fared much better. Therefore, it is important that we look towards such countries and develop and strengthen the core of the system in education and sanitation and banking before trying to develop the topmost layer.

  • @NPC1776
    @NPC1776 Před 5 lety +62

    I live in Baltimore, and Virgin Hyperloop One already started to build infrastructure here connecting to DC.

    • @koppadasao
      @koppadasao Před 5 lety +1

      Yeah, I know..., in the air...

    • @NPC1776
      @NPC1776 Před 5 lety +2

      @@koppadasao If I wasn't specific enough, my bad. I meant tunnels.

    • @koppadasao
      @koppadasao Před 5 lety

      Interpol Yeah…, tunnels in the air, where the air is really thin

    • @djrocko410
      @djrocko410 Před 5 lety +1

      Interpol I live in the Baltimore area too. I really do wish we had a high speed line besides Amtrak connecting the 5 cities. Why drive for an hour to DC when you can just hop on the hyperloop and get to Union station in 20 minutes

    • @LordDragon1965
      @LordDragon1965 Před 5 lety +1

      I would extend the Boston-DC all the way to Savannah through Atlanta, Charleston, the Research Triangle, Norfolk and Richmond, the California loop to Vancouver through Seattle, Portland and Eugene, also possibly south down the Baja.
      And a midwest loop of Chicago, Milwaukee, Madison, Minneapolis, Des Moines, Omaha, Kansas City, St Louis, Memphis, Nashville, Lexington, Cincinnati, Columbus, Cleveland, Toledo, Detroit, Lancing, Grand Rapids, Gary, Chicago witb perhaps 2 sub loops Cincinnati, Indianapolis, Gary and St Louis, Springfield, Bloomington, Joliet, Chicago would provide good places to connect the other 3 American loops (KC, Tulsa, Oklahoma City, Dallas) (Cleveland, Erie, Pittsburgh, Harrisburg, Buffalo, NYC) (Omaha, Denver, Salt Lake City, Las Vegas, Phoenix, LA) recreating much of the original transcontinental rail system

  • @JimmiAlli
    @JimmiAlli Před 3 lety +5

    I see you had a picture of Toronto with hyper loop at the end, but you did not mention a Toronto Montreal route which l think would be fantastic.

  • @flightmaster999
    @flightmaster999 Před 3 lety

    In Canada, the Quebec City to Windsor axis is where a very large part of the population of Canada lives. I think a Hyperloop would be very beneficial here. There is already a train from VIA Rail that covers this path, but it is very slow as it must give the right of way to cargo trains all the time. This path is about 1160 km and, if can ever find a ticket, it takes about 24 hours to complete.
    A hyperloop with stops in the following cities would be extraordinarily useful:
    - Quebec City
    - Montréal
    - Ottawa
    - Kingston
    - Toronto
    - Hamilton
    - London
    - Windsor
    That would be one heck of a cool project for all the cities involved!

  • @mightyduckman9039
    @mightyduckman9039 Před 5 lety +4

    Been a fan of this channel for a while kinda cool to see my city Fresno on it! Made my day🤗👍

  • @gilbertmjohnson
    @gilbertmjohnson Před 4 lety +18

    Japan doesn't need any more fast trains. When I went it was perfectly fine.

    • @awkwardragon5741
      @awkwardragon5741 Před 3 lety +1

      we need more, we are speed junkies

    • @DudesaQQ
      @DudesaQQ Před 2 lety +1

      XD you are talking about 1100 kph and 320 kph difference. Today Japanese are building 500 kph line which is still almost 2 times slower than a hyperloop

    • @GloriousSquizoKing.
      @GloriousSquizoKing. Před 2 lety

      @@DudesaQQ i doubt that something that *actually* exists is slower than the hyperloop.

    • @DudesaQQ
      @DudesaQQ Před 2 lety +1

      @@GloriousSquizoKing. So you basically said that we don't need any progress. If something exists we don't have to push any further and we don't have to try to do things better.
      Typical conservative closed mindset.

    • @GloriousSquizoKing.
      @GloriousSquizoKing. Před 2 lety +1

      @@DudesaQQ Were did i said that we don't need any progress? All i said is that assuming that the hyperloop is *already* faster than the fastest train in Japan, when that thing is not even build yet, is just bullshit.

  • @marvwatkins7029
    @marvwatkins7029 Před 2 lety +1

    'Catchment'? That's a new one. Not for storm drains anymore. 'Catch those passengers!'

  • @bicknell67
    @bicknell67 Před 3 lety

    I live in San Antonio and that Texas Triangle sure got my attention such a great idea.

  • @trevorduncan5214
    @trevorduncan5214 Před 5 lety +20

    I cant wait for the Sacramento to San Diego Hyper Loop! I live in the SF Bay Area and I always travel down to LA and San Diego, so I feel like the California Hyper Loop will help me travel the state even better and faster.

    • @gj9157
      @gj9157 Před 5 lety +5

      It's a cool idea, but not much progress is being made with the hyperloop.

    • @SomeGuy-lw2po
      @SomeGuy-lw2po Před 5 lety +2

      Think you better get use to waiting, this most likely won't happen in our lifetime

  • @TheLinus1212
    @TheLinus1212 Před 4 lety +19

    The Quebec City-Windsor Corridor (French: Corridor Québec-Windsor) is the most densely populated and heavily industrialized region of Canada. As its name suggests, the region extends between Quebec City in the northeast and Windsor, Ontario in the southwest, spanning 1,150 kilometres (710 mi). With more than 18 million people, it contains about half of the country's population,

    • @Matt-zp1jn
      @Matt-zp1jn Před 2 lety +1

      Maybe, but we should rename the 👑windsor corridor to their original name sax-coburg to recognize all the 👶🏻traffiking 🌭🧀🍕🔪🩸💉🐼🧠👼🏻☠️that has gone on👀🤔🧐

    • @gabetalks9275
      @gabetalks9275 Před rokem

      Hyperloop is just a worse version of high speed rail. It doesn't matter if hyperloop is faster than high speed rail because the hyperloop is an individual pod, while high speed train is a high capacity train, so high speed rail will move more people way faster and more efficiently.

  • @apaulson6590
    @apaulson6590 Před 4 lety

    Never thought I’d see good old Bakersfield on here but it would be a good slot on the connection.

  • @nadavatar123
    @nadavatar123 Před 4 lety +7

    I think a Toronto-Ottawa-Montreal-Quebec or Vancouver-Calgary-Edmonton hyperloop could work.

  • @ThatOneBuilderGuy
    @ThatOneBuilderGuy Před 4 lety +78

    Eugene, OR - Portland, OR, - Seattle, WA - Vancouver, BC would be great for the NW coast

    • @Hopscotchlemonadespritz
      @Hopscotchlemonadespritz Před 4 lety +3

      "Cascadia" !!

    • @adrianatgaming8640
      @adrianatgaming8640 Před 4 lety +7

      link that to California and BAM.

    • @123mintjelly
      @123mintjelly Před 4 lety +1

      Yes, I think that planes between Portland and Seattle are every 30 minutes.

    • @liamrabnett3829
      @liamrabnett3829 Před 4 lety +6

      Could potentially link with California’s hyperloop and turn the west coast into a single massive economy with two distinct & heavily cooperative megalopolises

    • @christopherstube9473
      @christopherstube9473 Před 4 lety

      During the time of President McKinley, there was a plan to build an extension across the Bering Straits to link with the transiberian and then go from Anchorage to someplace in Chile. The British would have lost a lot of shipping contracts to the railroads

  • @acke7980
    @acke7980 Před 5 lety +23

    Very good video! Hamburg-Berlin-Munich. Maybe Stockholm-Gothenburg-Malmö-Copenhagen

    • @koppadasao
      @koppadasao Před 5 lety +1

      Sweden may build it, but Denmark won't. But then the Swedes would build a rocket to land men on the surface of the sun...

    • @acke7980
      @acke7980 Před 5 lety

      Koppa Dasao what do you mean? Rocket to sun???

    • @koppadasao
      @koppadasao Před 5 lety

      Acke7 A rocket to land men on the surface of the sun. As I said. Are you Swedish or something?

    • @acke7980
      @acke7980 Před 5 lety

      Koppa Dasao Yes I’m Swedish. But what has a rocket to the sun with hyperloop to do?

    • @koppadasao
      @koppadasao Před 5 lety

      Acke7 Vel, siden du er en svenske så må jeg vel forklare det for deg… Sola har ingen overflate og Hyperloop er en helvetesmaskin

  • @datguyaosen
    @datguyaosen Před 3 lety

    Awesome Video

  • @ShawnMKouri
    @ShawnMKouri Před 4 lety +1

    Imagine one that would go from Miami, Fort Lauderdale, and Palm Beach metro area to Naples Florida, Fort Myers Florida, and the metropolitan area of Sarasota, Tampa, Saint Petersburg, and connecting to the Orlando metro area and then to Jacksonville.

  • @julioantoniosorialopez8158
    @julioantoniosorialopez8158 Před 4 lety +13

    You Missed Mexico´s project connecting Mexico City Queretaro León and Guadalajara..!

  • @martinmucheusi9560
    @martinmucheusi9560 Před 5 lety +9

    Cairo-Khartoum- Addis Ababa-Nairobi- Dodoma-Lusaka- Harare-Joburg- Capetown.
    This route would connect hundreds of millions of people.

    • @udishomer5852
      @udishomer5852 Před 5 lety +1

      hundreds of millions of people who can't afford the ticket price...

    • @sea247_
      @sea247_ Před 5 lety

      Maybe when Africa starts to develop more however Joburg to Cape town is possible

    • @pedrocardoso7671
      @pedrocardoso7671 Před 5 lety

      Africa needs to find its on way ... to solve basic problem of infrastructure.

  • @farazkhan7035
    @farazkhan7035 Před 2 lety

    very good journalism. keep up the good work

  • @marcuscarana9240
    @marcuscarana9240 Před 2 lety +3

    At this point the hyperloop looks more and more like a hype train that's about to crash down big time like the severely underwhelming Vegas Loop.

  • @jarupongch
    @jarupongch Před 5 lety +3

    South East Asia loop (Bangkok - Kuala Lampur - Singapore - Jakarta) could be viable too, linking possibly more than 50 million people, since these four cities air space is pretty much packed with planes every single day.

  • @smartbaba1321
    @smartbaba1321 Před 5 lety +15

    We don't know But India Introduce Semi Hi- speed Train... "Train-18 and train-20.
    And we are so happy about it...

    • @HOENUMAN
      @HOENUMAN Před 5 lety +4

      And Bullet train will be fully operational in India by 2022 and also I am happy 😁

    • @_--_8581
      @_--_8581 Před 5 lety

      @@HOENUMAN it'll be functional by December

    • @nayanahirrao3480
      @nayanahirrao3480 Před 5 lety +1

      For Mumbai- Pune route mou is signed by Maharashtra government and virgin company. So Mumbai- Pune is first route in India may be soon operational.

    • @arghya4NE
      @arghya4NE Před 5 lety

      O...onee chan ? :3

  • @emanuelenaso8106
    @emanuelenaso8106 Před 4 lety +1

    There’s also the economic core of Italy (spread from Venice to Turin via Milan) that’s deeply connected to the french and Central European economic regions that needs to be added to this list. For instance, Turin and Milan are located in the western part of this area and are close to France, while from the eastern side of this region is very practical for moving people and goods to Germany and the central/eastern countries of the EU. Not to mention that this area is home to nearly 40% of the Italian population and is home to the economic and financial capital of the Country.

  • @hmdwgf
    @hmdwgf Před 4 lety

    Hyperloops only really need to connect cities less than 800km apart. Any further than that you should just fly. Over here in the US, in addition to the routes you just said what we really need is:
    Albuquerque-Amarillo-Oklahoma City
    Atlanta-Nashville-Charlotte-Atlanta triangle
    Atlanta-Jacksonville
    Atlanta-Orlando/Tampa
    Boston-Burlington-Montreal
    Buffalo-Rochester-Albany-Boston
    Chicago-Indianapolis-Louisville
    Chicago-St. Louis
    Chicago-Detroit-Toledo-Cleveland-Buffalo
    Cincinnati-Detroit
    Dallas-Oklahoma City-Wichita-Topeka-Kansas City
    Dallas-Memphis
    Dallas-New Orleans
    Denver-Albuquerque-El Paso
    El Paso-San Antonio
    El Paso-Odessa-Fort Worth
    Fargo-Minneapolis-Milwaukee-Chicago
    Houston-New Orleans-Mobile-Penscaola-Tallahassee-Jacksonville
    Indianapolis-Detroit
    Jacksonville-Miami
    Jacksonville-Orlando-Tampa
    Kansas City-St. Louis
    Las Vegas-Carson City-Reno
    Los Angeles-Las Vegas-Phoenix-Los Angeles triangle
    Louisville-Cincinnati-Columbus-Cleveland
    Memphis-Nashville-Knoxville
    New Orleans-Memphis
    New York-Buffalo-Toronto
    New York-Albany-Montreal
    Norfolk-DC-Harrisburg-Buffalo
    Norfolk-Ocean City, MD-Dover, DE-Wilmington
    Norfolk-Ocean City, MD-NJ Beach Towns-New York
    Orlando-West Palm Beach-Miami
    Portland-Seattle-Vancouver
    Pensacola-Tallahassee-Orlando/Tampa
    Pittsburgh-Philadelphia-Atlantic City
    Pittsburgh-Hagerstown-Dulles Airport-DC
    Pittsburgh-Frederick-Baltimore
    Phoenix-Tuscon-Las Cruces-El Paso
    St. Louis-Indianapolis-Columbus-Pittsburgh
    San Diego-Las Vegas-Salt Lake City-Bozeman, MT
    Salt Lake City-Denver
    San Francisco-Las Vegas
    San Francisco-Oakland-Sacramento-Reno-Salt Lake City
    Tampa-West Palm Beach-Miami
    Tampa-St. Pete-Fort Myers-Naples-Fort Lauderdale
    VA Beach-Norfolk-Richmond-DC-Baltimore-Wilmington-Philadelphia-New York-New Haven-Providence-Foxborough-Boston-Portland, ME
    Canada:
    Calgary-Edmonton
    Vancouver-Calgary
    Detroit-Windsor-London-Toronto-Ottawa-Montreal-Quebec City
    Winnipeg-Regina
    That's how far behind we are in terms of rail transport.

  • @intuitivme
    @intuitivme Před 5 lety +81

    Hyperloops is known for its speed. But how about the capacity of the pods and trains? In this video you are talking about connecting tens of millions at once and commuting, this would mean that huge capacities are needed at once in rush hour. In Europe they have introduced double dekker trains and even double dekker TGV's.
    And saving time compare to airport's security and checkins: will this not be needed for such transport method?

    • @CrazyInWeston
      @CrazyInWeston Před 5 lety +24

      This! - How many seats are in each 'pod' - how long is a pod, will be be multiple pods running a train like system? Every damn video shows only 1 pod and I'm like... how is this efficient? A train will hold more.

    • @spencerwilton5831
      @spencerwilton5831 Před 5 lety +2

      CrazyInWeston with virtually zero friction trains could be as long as required.

    • @pasoundman
      @pasoundman Před 5 lety +20

      The supposed advantages of hyperloops are entirely mythical. You mention just a couple of examples. Demand for travel peaks at certain times of the day and capacity and security are certainly some of hyperloop's many flaws. Elon Musk suggests some barking mad ideas at times ! Making rocket fuel on Mars is another example.

    • @CrystalStearOfTheCas
      @CrystalStearOfTheCas Před 5 lety +13

      @@pasoundman Thank you for your input on these issues. Elon has red your comment and will stop all operations immediately. Thanks! you saved him billions of dollars because of course, knowing so much more than he and his company does he just realized that he is indeed mad and listened to reason! Oh and also i'm pretty sure you would've been part of the people trying to stop the wright brothers trying to fly, because heh, they're barking mad and the plane has many flaws.....
      STFU man

    • @pasoundman
      @pasoundman Před 5 lety +8

      @@CrystalStearOfTheCas I think Elon Musk is more concerned about problems at Tesla and the Gigafactory actually.

  • @gabrielgingras814
    @gabrielgingras814 Před 5 lety +6

    Québec city, splitting in Montréal to reach the Boston - DC loop, and west as the transcanadian loop (first known as the Québec city - Toronto loop).

  • @medicmandan2554
    @medicmandan2554 Před 3 lety +3

    Let's be honest, some of these loops are just a flex...

  • @md.masudurrahman6105
    @md.masudurrahman6105 Před 4 lety

    VERY NICE INFORMATION