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Solar panel driven travelling



!! Find the extended version "bubbles&beams II" - search for tag "gts3" !! It is possible to drive a Personal Rapid Transfer system with solar panels. This video is another version of www.youtube.com

Written by Handy Man

Local Handyman looking for ways to receive free energy and power without the high costs of the power companies.

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19 Responses to "Solar panel driven travelling"

  1. pereja12 says:

    This is a general transport system that can eliminate cars. By hanging the containers under the beam they can easily interact with other means of transport, thus facilitating a gradual introduction of the system.
    Stability and comfort is increased as the centrifugal forces make the cars lean at exactly the right angle on curves.
    Riding on top of the beams makes everything more difficult. The genius of this design is in hanging the cars under the beam.
    .

  2. ahoog69 says:

    There are some great ideas here! Still, I think a system where the pods run on top of a guideway would be perceived as being more safe (and perception is important in trying to sell such a system to the public). Also, I think each pod should hold no more (and no less) than 4 people. Finally, since stations would be no less than 1/4 mile apart, some walking would still be involved.

  3. DeltaKilo3 says:

    Don’t we have that kind of nation already? I do see your point though, I’m sure it could do without the moving chairs.

  4. xsyar says:

    what if the sun not shining.. jump 5 meter from ground?

  5. greblyksnah says:

    Of course anyone can travel. Just in person, in company of up to 6, with a bike or pram. The new prolonged video version (search for “Bubbles&Beams II”) shows this.

  6. Chrutonius says:

    Verry nice idea, but are u suppose to sit in a kewl wheelchair when u ride ? ;D

  7. Thehaymarketbomber says:

    The “dual-mode” car shown obviously could be made to work but it will be a lot heavier, more complicated, and expensive than a car which operates only in the automated system. The two-way tracks cost twice as much to build as one-way, but since the sytem in the video is intended for high speed between cities, there may be no other way to do it. The suspended cars will probably be heavier than cars which run on top of the guideway, with a resulting penalty in energy consumption.

  8. CadenRolland says:

    Advantages: very low maintenance costs, much lower casualty rates, greater speed (important for emergency vehicles), all terrain access, terrorist resistant, sound reduction, (if solar powered) low and fixed costs to use, and could easily be accessible to all income levels, oh and environmentally friendly. Vast improvement over traditional highway passenger systems.

  9. CadenRolland says:

    None of this technology is unworkable in fact it, in part, all of it is in use somewhere.
    To keep costs low the companies that make these products could be enlisted by governments to produce a total working package.
    The countries most likely to invest in this would have mountainous and/or watery terrain where roads and bridges are very expensive and lengthy projects.

  10. greblyksnah says:

    How do you know it is expensive? Calculations indicate they are a lot cheaper then any other kind of traffic if you consider all aspects (building, land costs, traffic, energy, travel time, safety, a s o

  11. Thehaymarketbomber says:

    The suspended cars, the two-way tracks, and the dual-mode (PRT and surface road) cars are all expensive and probably unworkable engineering mistakes. Beautiful video though.

  12. urbandigitalclo says:

    Nice graphics, but definitely not my vision for the future…
    Does nobody want to walk these days? and what does the superhighway in the air do for life on the ground? In general cities are trying to do away with infrastructure in the air (Boston putting it’s highway system underground is a prime example) as it deteriorates the coherence, navigation in and liveability of the city…

  13. energyadvertiser says:

    They should use this with new town developments.

  14. violetlight9 says:

    Some great concepts there. However, I don’t see how this solves the congestion and social issues of personal transport. Also, there’s a strong risk with this door to door approach that we’ll end up a nation of fat unhealthy people.

  15. Splatzone says:

    Absolutely amazing, inspirational.

  16. greblyksnah says:

    @Splatzone: Yes I did the 3D (trueSpace) water colour backgrounds, most of the story and a lot of the cunstruction of the system to make the video show something that is really possible, not just a fantasy.

  17. Splatzone says:

    It’s fantastic! Did you do the 3d?

  18. 123nameless123 says:

    I love this idea i wish more people would see it. Good 3D effects too man.

  19. eporter95b says:

    The solar panels are an inspirational addition!

    Thank You!

    I think this begins to show a vision of a future with transportation. If society responds, we can retain mobility. If society fails to respond, what will a future be like with ocean levels up 30 to 60 feet, no transportation as we have come to expect it today, and no oil based industry?
    I prefer the dream and the vision and the imperative to make it so.

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