Are you suggesting robocars require no drivers license and every one can
afford a robocar thereby eliminating public transit? Surely you jest.
BTW if a computer is controlling the car who is liable in an accident?
Dennis
Whoops. That sort of talk ends any debate with me. If you would care
to repost your
thoughts without this sort of statement in them, and pledge never to
make such statements
again in your apology, I will read them. I hereby pledge never to ask which sand your head is placed into.
You wrote:
<If you don't accept that, then you can keep talking about PRT, but you have
to answer the question, why is it that 40 years later there's <no PRT, if
it's really so good?
If I'm not mistaken the idea for a robocar goes back to the 30's. I think
it's you that should answer the question. Besides PRT is here or coming
soon: Morgantown, ULTra underconstruction, Vectus nearing test completion,
and Masdar looking promising.
One more question. How fast do you envision robocars? Have you ever checked
out Applied Levitation? or et3?
Dennis
Thanks for responding. I guess we will just have to watch the development of
PRT/DM/Robocar. You really should see et3 to see what's possible for PRT.
Goodluck.
Dennis
----- Original Message -----
From: "Brad Templeton" <bra...@gmail.com>
To: "transport-innovators" <transport-...@googlegroups.com>
Sent: Saturday, September 06, 2008 7:12 PM
Subject: [t-i] Re: PRT obsoleted by robocars
If you don't grid-tie
your solar, you get times when the power is just being discarded
because your system is not using it, and that's anti-green."
Off-grid solar in
a city is, I will reiterate, worse than silly."
"Or do you speak of some kind of solar-thermal driven car? Where
thermal energy drives the wheels? I had not heard of anything like
that before.'
These are contest vehicles. A solar panel on a moving car will,
> went across Australia at 40 mph using solar power. The statement that
> transportation is silly that is solar powered is disproved by the solar
> challenge race series. How do you gel this with the assertion?
again, often find itself throwing away its output because the car is
not moving and the batteries are not highly discharged. That's
what's silly -- building expensive solar panels and then discarding
This would make sense -- if anybody had shown success at deploying a
large guideway infrastructure.
I wrote a paper on PRT for my urban
geography class in 1976. I must say I'm tired of waiting, and I'm
sure I am not alone. Watching how innovation works in the computer
industry, I have become more and more of the opinion that a chance for
transportation to follow that path is more likely to bring success."
I've seen many explanations about why there are no real PRTs (and just
a couple of toy PRTs at Heathrow and Dubai) but they have the smell,
to me, of "there's always an explanation, but never a success."
I believe the answer is that cities -- which are who buys transit --
are not innovators. It is the exception rather than the rule. Even
the toy PRTs at Heathrow and the UAE being built not by cities, but by
an airport with a larger budget, and a slightly crazy but visionary
dictator. Morgantown is not PRT as I see it.
If this is correct -- that it is the resistance to innovation among
municipal transit agencies that blocks the adoption of PRT -- then it
has a long hill to climb.
Cities won't buy it until they see a large
working system. But a large working system isn't anything like what
we see. A large system has 100s of km of guideway, and 100s of
stations,
because it needs to take a lot of people from where they are
to where they want to go, not be like traditional transit and take
them only between a few selected popular places.
I think everyone here gets that a mix of sources powers the grid, and
electric transport is and should be grid-tied. However, some believe
that "solar transport" is a political selling point, even if it involves
exploiting some incomplete understanding of elected officials of how
electricity works.
I agree with your point that cybercars can more easily jump the
introduction threshold than any new fixed rail mode can.
Along those lines, I've been thinking in the past year or so that the
most feasible leap in technology is a combination of BRT and
neighborhood cybercars. BRT with long station spacing and priority
signals is a practically instant, cheap and effective way to serve the
distance in metro transit, but it lacks any solution for the last mile.
Cybercars going 15 mph, which do NOT use arterials but only neighborhood
streets and urban core streets, would cost effectively serve the last
mile and could be put in service fairly soon it seems. I estimate that
these two companion technologies could move US cities from 1-5% transit
share to 10-25%, and lower overall transport costs.
From that situation, two competing trends could occur: (1) cybercars'
speed limits could be relaxed and they could use arterials, thereby
providing end-to-end transport; and (2) the BRT lines could be upgraded
to a routable, sometimes elevated, fixed rail network for higher speeds
and less congestion. Both of those trends could occur and find an
equilibrium along with the existing modes; I don't see why one of them
has to necessarily win out over the other.
The step after THAT would be to upgrade cybercars to be able to use the
routable network. This sequence of trends almost eliminates the
introduction thresholds.
> Along those lines, I've been thinking in the past year or so that the
> most feasible leap in technology is a combination of BRT and
> neighborhood cybercars. BRT with long station spacing and priority
> signals is a practically instant, cheap and effective way to serve the
> distance in metro transit, but it lacks any solution for the last mile.
> Cybercars going 15 mph, which do NOT use arterials but only neighborhood
> streets and urban core streets, would cost effectively serve the last
> mile and could be put in service fairly soon it seems. I estimate that
> these two companion technologies could move US cities from 1-5% transit
> share to 10-25%, and lower overall transport costs.
Ian,
I hate to have to get into the sales mode for our systems, but all of
this fantasy dreams of robocars discussion makes it impossible for me to
refrain because I know how to accomplish most of the goals right now, so
please forgive me and it any of you are offended, just delete this post and
don't read further.
The MicroRail system of which we first road tested the first dualmode
vehicle on Labor Day can nicely solve that last mile problem with a
combination of core, main lines carrying a combination of passenger trains
and CarTrains carrying compact automobiles that drive onto and off of the
CarTrain CarFerries at special stations along the main lines. If the small
cars are built with compatible automatic electrical connectors on the
underside, they can be low-speed, pure electric vehicles that nicely solve
that last mile problem. Furthermore, this technology is here now and
initial systems could start operating within about three years. Because the
main lines and trains carry both passengers, cargo, and small personal
automobiles, such systems should earn enough revenue to recover their
initial cost and pay all of the O&M costs, something that few conventional
mass transit systems have ever done. Furthermore, we don't have to wait for
any more technology development such as robocar technology, that may or not
ever become a practical reality. The guideway is low enough in cost, that
most cities could easily purchase and install these systems with revenue
bonds and probably never spend a dime of tax money.
By the way, we have already found ourselves giving two different Fort
Worth city council members our presentation and shown them the vehicle and
they came to us without even before we were able to start any marketing
effort, an activity that we just started this last week. I believe that
this indicates a real interest in some public transportation officials in
lightweight, elevated systems that do far more than conventional systems and
do it at far less cost.
With such a system in place, I suspect that public transit share of
travellers within cities might rather rapidly grow to more than 50% and in
the process, greatly reduce the haze of heavily carbon product polluted air
in large cities. It would also greatly decrease the trip times for most
users. Use of such a system would also greatly decrease the travel cost for
most users. With the combination of 95% efficiency motors and regenerative
braking from the motors, we were amazed that after about 30 minutes of
driving the car in the pure electric mode, the could not even detect any
drop in the battery voltage by the end of the driving test.
I suggest that you all take a careful look at the following url:
http://megarail.com/pdf/MCPCAL-3.pdf
By the way the above url may change within the next few days. However,
the only change will be from a -3 to a -4.
Kirston Henderson
MegaRail®
At the same time PRT is obviously gaining interest and ground. Basically
it's public transit becoming more private, like the car, in an automated
version. Seems to me these are two converging development lines,
ultimately ending at approximately the same point (depending on the
technology applied for the PRT systems...)
But I also believe they will have to co-exist. PRT will be the public
transit system, while robocars will the private system. The advantage
PRT has over robocars is significant in one aspect: parking. Robocars
would still require dedicated parking spaces everywhere, wasting
valuable space, while PRT vehicles would be re-used. That's why they
could co-exist, as do cars and public transit today. It would be great
if both systems could share the same infrastructure, not requiring
dedicated lanes for either one.
If you like PRT couldn't robocars be the next thing? If you like
robocars couldn't be PRT systems be the step-up to it? You can disagree
about the time-line (when does what get done), but this will not be
limited by technology, but rather by emotions (of users, customers and
decision makers...)
Robbert
gary schreef:
And a Robobumper; airbag like that catches and protects the victim?
Walt Brewer
----- Original Message -----
From: "Bruce Attah" <bruce...@googlemail.com>
To: "transport-innovators" <transport-...@googlegroups.com>
Sent: Sunday, September 07, 2008 11:28 AM
Subject: [t-i] Re: PRT obsoleted by robocars
>
This sounds like the French effort to do the same thing with the
radial RER commuter rail
lines in the Paris region. The project involved developing little
cars that could be used to
access the RER stations. To get the cars back to their origins, they
would be led by
a driven vehicle and follow it in a platoon, linked electronically, I think.
There is lots of info about Cybercars at www.cybercars.org
Also: http://www.cybercars.org/cyb-technologies.html#platoon
The EU people appear to be far ahead of the flashy DARPA effort in terms of
their thinking, problem solving and development/demonstration efforts.
- Jerry Schneider -
Innovative Transportation Technologies
http://faculty.washington.edu/jbs/itrans
Is the above agreeable to all? There are contradictions, but those will
always remain (you have to take them into account when designing the
system and trying to convince decision makers). Any additions?
Robbert
Bruce Attah schreef:
First, I mean no disrespect to anyone on this board, I enjoy monitoring the dialog. At the same time, after monitoring the development of transit technology since 1969 (actually that is also the way I see this board) I have a bit of understanding regarding this field.
Which brings me to a point:
"There is nothing more effective than an undeveloped transit system!"
If I did not create this phrase, I have surely used it quite a bit, and the truth of it has never diminished.
(Actually, I think maybe George Pastor did. He was good at coining phrases - "People Mover" was one that he started that he always wished he hadn't, but how do you pull it back after it caught on?)
I bring up this phrase, because it is very appropriate for all of those here that are doing their best, through transportation innovation, to find ways to improve our society and make the quality of life better for citizens around the world - and that is the ultimate goal that ties us all together.
Before a system goes into operation carrying thousands of people a day, there is a long road ahead - hats off to those of you who have advanced from the talking stage to the hardware stage.
I jump into these discussions now because of Bruce's statements:
Regarding
the first point: PRT has seemed possible for 40 years,
and
was first realized in a working scale model 36
years ago (Aerospace
Corporation), and in full, 30
years ago (Cabinentaxi). That first
realization was
not commercially adopted for reasons that boil down
to
the fact that it was expensive. The Cabinentaxi
PRT system worked
perfectly, passed all its tests,
including endurance tests, and
received the thumbs up
from the regulatory authorities. However, the
system
was designed to support both PRT and APM, which means it
was
bulky and complicated, and would not be able to
undercut rival APM
systems.
First I have every hope that we will find applications for the Cabintaxi technology and get it and further updated versions into operation.
Going back to history for a second.
"was not commercially adopted for reasons that boil
down to
the fact that it was
expensive"
In the little writing I have done, I have stated clearly the reasons that Cabintaxi was not built in Hamburg. Money always is a factor in everything, but the Cabintaxi system costs were not the reason for the Cabintaxi system not being installed. The superficial reason was the program costs not falling in line with the funding available in the budget of the Ministry for Research and Technology. That budget was severely impacted by an across the board 10% cut in all federal departments of German government at the time. When transportation development efforts switch from test facilities to real world implementation, the budget demands for a program skyrocket. Where as Cabintaxi was only one of a hundred programs under the umbrella of the Ministry of Research and Technology during it normal development effort, the real world implementation made the Cabintaxi project 10% of the total program of the Ministry, and by cutting that one project - only one program to deal with negatively - met the 10% program reduction requirement of the government directive. Is this the reason - yes. Is this the entire reason in detail, of course not - it is just true that it was not the costs per mile of the Cabintaxi system that caused it not to be installed.
"The Cabinentaxi PRT system
worked
perfectly"
Not even I would claim this!
"passed all its tests, including endurance tests,
and
received the thumbs up from
the regulatory authorities"
This is essentially correct. As good as engineering gets, engineering will always be the art of correcting mistakes. At the point of approval for the installation in Hamburg, Cabintaxi was at the end of a 10 year development program - six iterations of full scale built and tested guideway cross sections and 14 iterations of full scale vehicles; designed, developed, built, run and tested, refined, and redesigned. We were going into the Hamburg project with a seventh iteration of the guideway, and we would alter the vehicle undercarriage on the upper running system to stiffen the undercarriage's relationship to the vehicle control. (I make this point to again demonstrate that refinements will always be needed, and that thinking that a system can go from a simple test track to an actual installation, has historically been wishful.)
"which means it
was
bulky and
complicated"
Ahmmm.....tell me a transit system that is more complicated than PRT, adding 12 passenger or 18 passenger vehicles which can operate in a PRT mode does not make the system more complicated than PRT, actually they allow the system to be implemented in less complicated programs to allow a network system to get started....show me a developed PRT system that is less bulky than a single lane of Cabintaxi........show me any system that can give bi-directional urban mass transit operation at the cost of a Cabintaxi bi-directional system....show me a single level urban area PRT network that can not be installed more effectively and at lower cost with an over-and-under Cabintaxi PRT network...show me anyone that has truly studied what the Cabintaxi system actually represents......
"and would not be able to undercut rival
APM
systems."
Just so we are clear on how I can make the following statements, I led the Mannesmann and Messerschmidt joint venture marketing efforts for the Detroit People Mover Project, and after Cabintaxi withdrew from the transit field, I went to work for UTDC and was the first corporate representative in Detroit to start the implementation of what became the present Detroit system. While the joint venture backed away from placing a bid on the Detroit project, we had already worked out an in house bid. That bid was twenty percent lower than what the winning bid was from the APM competition. While that bid was twenty percent lower, it still provided the bi-directional operation - not requested but desired by Detroit. Our bid (company policy) was to have been a fixed price bid (even though that was not part of Detroit's RFP) with our joint venture taking the risks of over-run, and building it into our price, still twenty percent less than the competition. This created a situation where we would have been proposing a system with twice the guideway miles, more vehicles providing superior service levels, and still doing it at twenty percent less than the competing APM suppliers running a single lane system. That does not even take into consideration the Detroit DPM project overran - surprise surprise - by 100%.
To the present:
No PRT system made it as far in its implementation as the Morgantown system. Yet the rush to its implementation means it will never be built again. Endurance testing on the back of the customer resulted, in Morgantown, in a program that was able to get a system running, but not one that the developers would ever build again. Cabintaxi may have been on the other extreme, it might have benefited from a quicker installation program so that the funding agency did not experience administration changes where those newly involved had little commitment.
There are many things in human nature and transit development that are not directly obvious, years spent in this business lets me know that debating is of little use. I just did not want these statements, understandably not meant in negative intent, to be accepted as fact.
I am not aware of any urban PRT system, in concept or under development, that at the time that development is finished, will represent a more effective urban transit system than the already developed Cabintaxi technology. If we are successful in our ongoing efforts, our intent is to privately operate advanced transportation systems. If and when we are successful, show us a better system, and we would look to include it in our operational efforts. Private e-mails are always welcome.
Sincere best wishes,
Marsden Burger
Cabintaxi Corporation
From: Bruce AttahSent: Sunday, September 07, 2008 11:28 AMSubject: [t-i] Re: PRT obsoleted by robocars
Do you also have the answer to finding the half - trillion dollars that is needed to fix the roads "right now", money that nobody has because they have spent it on other projects. Then you may need a similiar amount over the next 40 years to repair them again.
This may require a trip back to the dreaming board.
From: Brad Templeton <bra...@gmail.com> |
> Kirston,
> That is very interesting - allowing the "trains" to run as regular
> road vehicles, DM trains if you will.
>
> It seems implied that PRT cybercars could utilize MicroRail instead of
> the larger MegaRail system?
Ans: The MicroRail guideway will be able to carry dualmode vehicles
specially designed for operation on the guideway. It may not matter as to
how they are controlled during street operations.
>
> Does the efficiency of the rail vehicles suffer if snow tires are
> needed instead of low rolling resistance tires? How do you keep
> potholes and such from causing damage to the vehicles/tires? If the
> trains run on battery power when off the rails, how far can they go?
Ans: I would expect that dualmode vehicles equipped with snow treads
would work well on the guideway, but would likely generate a little more
noise. As for pothole damage, we expect that dualmode vehicles will be
limited to reasonably low speeds and thus be less susceptible to damage from
potholes. The dualmode trams would all be equipped with on-board generators
plus batteries. Small dualmode personal vehicles might well be battery
powered and designed for ranges of only about 15 miles without charging or
returning to the rail.
>
> I can see great advantage to having all wheels drive (esp. in snow/ice
> conditions). Traction-control might also be useful.
Ans: Our vehicles are driven by two or more electric wheelmotors and
include traction control in the control systems.
> There are problems with articulated buses in Ottawa. Worst example:
> http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2260/2301963552_c62163152e_m.jpg
> http://busdriverofdurham.blogspot.com/2008_03_01_archive.html
Interesting stuff.
Kirston Henderson
MegaRail®
The common ground is that we are all talking automation - removing the
driver in favor of the computer. We seem to diverge on the question of the
best path/guideway, and the questions about what can best solve the
implementation challenge.
Further I think there's a primary question. If you have a vehicle that is
computer controlled then what is the best path/guideway. I'd simply submit
that it isn't a slab of pavement.
Brad says it is. Gary says it's rail at ground level, and many say it's
elevated guideway.
Maybe this ferment is what keeps us on our toes. I'd just add that all of us
are serving up better options than what we are getting from our respective
governments, or the corporate private sector for that matter.
What we all need is a winning demo of an automated network. It has to be a
network. Elevators are automated. That's not what we are all about. What
it's all about is an automated network.
One last comment. It's not about about automated vehicles. You can have a
fully automated vehicle that's bogged down in the network unless the network
is properly designed.
Dennis
----- Original Message -----
From: "gary" <garyd...@gmail.com>
To: "transport-innovators" <transport-...@googlegroups.com>
Sent: Sunday, September 07, 2008 10:49 PM
Subject: [t-i] Re: PRT obsoleted by robocars
>
As an innovator and pioneer in the computer/internet world and having been
an active particpant in the dazzling twists and turns of that world. I'm
surprised at how you are so certain about the path of advanced
transportation. I think it will be every bit as dazziling. Moving
information is vital. Moving people and goods is also very fundamental. You
can have all the information in the world, but if doesn't improve our
transpotration system in the movement of people and goods what's the use?
Dennis
----- Original Message -----
From: "Brad Templeton" <bra...@gmail.com>
To: "transport-innovators" <transport-...@googlegroups.com>
Sent: Sunday, September 07, 2008 11:42 PM
Subject: [t-i] Re: PRT obsoleted by robocars
>
>
>
>
These cost relationships are not estimates on a future "to be developed" system . These are real cost relationship for a finished system ready for installation. These are true costs for real small vehicle hardware that were accepted by the entire Cabintaxi development effort. The Cabintaxi technology was a "transparent" development by the German government with the over site and involvement of five public transit and rail organizations which literally play a significant role in setting the world standards for fixed rail safety - the German Federal Railway (DB), the Technical Examination Authority (TUV), the Association of Public Transportation Operators (VOV), the Industrial Plant and Operation Advisory (IABG), the Hamburg Elevated Rail system (Hamburg Hochbahn) - not to mention the German Ministry for Research and Technology. Nothing in transit development history has come close to the program developed in Germany in the 70's, and ongoing with Transrapid to this day. In my opinion, the closest to this amazing effort, was the equally amazing individual effort of Kirk Foley and his team in the creation of the Ontario Transportation Development Corporation in Canada, which also had the wisdom (and the funding) to involve the true transportation world in the development effort.
Notice above that the three passenger over running system is effectively the same as any over running three passenger vehicle system concept in the world, again for an "urban" PRT system - not dual mode, not intercity, not etc..... Can a system be developed that will have a less expensive guideway - probably, but not much less. However, the issue is between conventional rail and small vehicle systems; the difference between a Cabintaxi system costs and other yet undeveloped three passenger systems is meaningless in the comparison to conventional rail to small vehicles.
I think it is also important to note that in all of the simulation work done for application of small vehicle systems in Germany, undoubtedly more real world detailed simulation work done than anywhere else in the world on this subject, (examples shown below) I am unaware of a study that showed a single level PRT system found to be more effective than the over and under. Had an application been better served by the single level approach, the Cabintaxi effort would have supplied it - we had two single level PRT systems.
Also note above the cost relationship differences between an under running single level system and an over running single level system. Is there a difference - sure. Is it worth arguing about?
The important issues for our advanced technology efforts are how do we get major transportation improvements that can change the quality of life for mankind into installation.
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Thanks for posting. Yes, it was interesting. The sensor technology has
certainly taken a leap. I noticed the prediction as to when drivers would
finally let go of wheel was about 20 years out, but a much shorter time for
more driver aides to be used.
When I rode in the buicks in the 1996 demo of platooning cars in San Diego
the equipment took up most of the trunk.
Dennis
----- Original Message -----
From: "gary" <garyd...@gmail.com>
To: "transport-innovators" <transport-...@googlegroups.com>
Sent: Sunday, September 07, 2008 10:49 PM
Subject: [t-i] Re: PRT obsoleted by robocars
>
<But now let me rephrase a question you asked
"If you have a vehicle that is computer controlled then what is the
best path/guideway?" You said you didn't think it was roads.
What if I ask it as "If you have a vehicle that can operate safely on
a flat surface with no need of a guideway, what is the best path/
guideway?">
That's not a question since you state "no need of a guideway". So I have
your answer.
Dennis
If the annual average mileage per auto is about 15,000 miles/year,
dividing by 365 days gives
an average of 41 miles per day - or about 1.36 hours per day per
vehicle, at 30 mph, which is
5.6 % of 24 hours - with lots of variation around the mean. Of
course, time of day, day of week,
season, etc. does affect what's "on the road" at any particular time
or time period.
I did a research project once that attempted to calculate where the
population of a city was located, stationary or
in motion, during the day. It was funded with earthquake research
money, These people make the assumption
that everyone is home all the time (i.e. the nighttime population
distribution) when making their damage forecasts
for an earthquake of a particular magnitude and epicenter location.
My Chinese student developed a computer program that did reams of
calculations (using some heroic assumptions) that showed how far off
this assumption is likely to be during different times of the day.
- Jerry Schneider -
Innovative Transportation Technologies
http://faculty.washington.edu/jbs/itrans
Walt Brewer
----- Original Message -----
From: "Jerry Schneider" <j...@peak.org>
To: <transport-...@googlegroups.com>
Sent: Monday, September 08, 2008 8:30 PM
Subject: [t-i] Re: PRT obsoleted by robocars
>
I think I'll let you and gary duke it out on all the robocar speculations.
My thoughts run along the lines that the future (20-50 years out) will
contain manually controlled cars and other manually controlled vehicles, and
robocars, and automated fixed guideway systems (networks). The questions are
market share and timing. All of the systems we discuss are already in the
mix. Even robocars and PRT have their infant renditions. What I think is
missed in much of this discussion is each system has it's merits, it's
niche. PRT can do things that robos can't and vice versa.
Arguably the earliest automated fixed guideway system in wide use is the
elevator. Then came APMs (horizontal). Then PRT functionality is realized at
Morgantown and proved doable by Cabintaxi and Raytheon (network). The single
biggest advantage of PRT over robocar may eventually be the right of way
competition.
Robo vehicles putter around hospitals, warehouses, and large scale vehicles
at ports.
We will just see what progresses and how soon.
The ULTra and FROG systems are sort of hybrids. They run on a flat surface,
steer themselves, have obstacle sensors, etc. What the difference is between
the fork in the road leading to gary's or Brad's vision is the degree to
which the path is separated from existing traffic.
One more item. At grade systems must compete with what's already using the
space. There isn't a lot of competition for space 25 feet above grade (maybe
some buildings excepted).
It depends on where you are that determines whether at grade or elevated is
the most expensive.
Dennis
----- Original Message -----
From: "Brad Templeton" <bra...@gmail.com>
To: "transport-innovators" <transport-...@googlegroups.com>
Sent: Monday, September 08, 2008 7:14 PM
Subject: [t-i] Re: PRT obsoleted by robocars
>
>
>
>>
Concrete is a difficult underground for a transport system. It's ride
comfort charactaristics are below par and it is hard to maintain
properly. The seems between the concrete will cause the sensation of a
train. Asphalt is really unbeatable with regard to those aspects. In
capital costs there is not much difference, if you compare apples with
apples (obivously there is if you compare concrete 'tracks' with a
complete asphalt road).
Robbert
Walt Brewer
----- Original Message -----
From: "Mike C" <mwil...@gmail.com>
To: "transport-innovators" <transport-...@googlegroups.com>
Sent: Tuesday, September 09, 2008 9:37 AM
Subject: [t-i] Re: PRT obsoleted by robocars
Walt Brewer
----- Original Message -----
From: "Bruce Attah" <bruce...@googlemail.com>
To: "transport-innovators" <transport-...@googlegroups.com>
Sent: Tuesday, September 09, 2008 11:11 AM
Subject: [t-i] Re: PRT obsoleted by robocars
>
>
>
Good points. It's simply that PRT can facilitate much different land use
patterns than at grade robocars.
Dennis
----- Original Message -----
From: "Mike C" <mwil...@gmail.com>
To: "transport-innovators" <transport-...@googlegroups.com>
Sent: Tuesday, September 09, 2008 9:31 AM
Subject: [t-i] Re: PRT obsoleted by robocars
Assumptions:
1) I want to build a system in American cities in the next 20 years.
2) I think it's not possible in the next 20 years to run automated vehicles
together with cars.
3) I think it's not possible in the next 20 years to get rid of all manually
driven surface vehicles.
This leads me to conclude that I need a grade-separated system. Typically,
at least in the parts of Seattle I care about, tunneling is too expensive
and land isn't available for new at-grade right of way. This leads me to
conclude that elevated is the only option.
Which piece of that argument do you disagree with? I agree that it would be
nice to have something that stopped at every house and was really
inexpensive, but I'm not willing to give up on Assumption #1 above.
--David
-----Original Message-----
From: transport-...@googlegroups.com
[mailto:transport-...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of gary
Sent: Tuesday, September 09, 2008 11:27 AM
To: transport-innovators
Subject: [t-i] elevation
Brad,
I know we differ on issues like rails, ownership and such, but I am
completely at a loss to understand why everyone in this group is so
hell bent on elevating their systems. I see it as absolute insanity.
Too ugly, too inflexible, and the real show-stopper, impossibly
expensive. So if you're feeling this way lately, don't feel like
you're the only one!
gary
----- Original Message -----
From: "eph" <rhaps...@yahoo.com>
To: "transport-innovators" <transport-...@googlegroups.com>
Sent: Tuesday, September 09, 2008 11:35 AM
Subject: [t-i] Re: PRT obsoleted by robocars
>
> True, but to put things into perspective, even in Germany where they
> have to lowest home ownership rates in Europe, it's at 40% (and
> rising).
>
> F.
snip
On July 17th, CBS News Productions spent all day at California Lutheran
University (CLU) filming and interviewing the AVT Project. We don't know yet
the date for the AVT segment, but we do have written confirmation from CBS
News Productions that the AVT will be included in the NextWorld series.
Last month the AVT Project was interviewed on Ventura County's KKZZ talk
radio for a full hour and we have been invited to make another presentation
at the KKZZ sponsored Big E Extravaganza (E for Environment) on September
27th and 28th in Oxnard, with the 16 foot AVT prototype model.
We will be presenting "The AVT - a Solar Powered Energy and Traffic
Solution" at CLU on September 24th at 7:30 PM. If you are able to attend,
please call 800-924-3306 to RSVP and get directions.
Thank you,
Frank Randak
You make some very interesting observations. I'm not in your league when it
comes to the internet and computers, but I have read a lot of George Gilder
and believe I have a reasonable grasp of the "smart network" vs. "dumb
network" ideas.
So far as I know there are quite a lot of each out there with most of the
explosion occurring on the edge, but what I've been saying is elevated PRT
can yield land uses and patterns not possible with wheeled road cars. Think
what elevators did for building heights. (no visual problem there) :-)
The unknown innovation yet to come is not confined to the transportation
portion only. You should know that better than anyone.
Dennis
----- Original Message -----
From: "Brad Templeton" <bra...@gmail.com>
To: "transport-innovators" <transport-...@googlegroups.com>
Sent: Tuesday, September 09, 2008 11:57 AM
Subject: [t-i] Re: PRT obsoleted by robocars