Posted on 06/06/2012 2:44:37 PM PDT by Zakeet
Freight normally hauled by trucks could one day soon be shipped on an electric-powered, overhead guideway across Texas. It may seem like an idea more suitable for Tomorrowland and artist renderings of the project do resemble Disneys famed monorail system but Texas officials are encouraging a privately-funded business to get the project up and running, perhaps within six years.
[The developers] have formed Freight Shuttle International, a company that is cobbling together the estimated $2.5 billion needed to build the first leg of this futuristic transportation system. The guideways would be built within the existing right-of-way of Interstate 35, initially stretching about 250 miles from San Antonio to Waxahachie but eventually extending north through Dallas-Fort Worth, and south to the Mexican border. Ultimately, Freight Shuttle guideways could be built on more than 2,000 miles of highway right-of-way across the state, he said.
The system would haul cargo of various sizes, packed in both intermodal containers and freight trailers. Terminals would be built at each end of the route, so that trucks could load and off-load their goods onto the Freight Shuttle guideways. The shipments would be placed on unmanned transporters powered by linear induction motors using electricity and a magnetic field. They would glide on steel wheels across the guideways at about 60 mph, Roop told members of the Tarrant Regional Transportation Coalition during a meeting Wednesday in Fort Worth.
Shippers would be able to get their goods across the state for pennies on the dollar compared to what it costs to haul freight in tractor-trailers, said Ken Allen, a retired logistics executive for grocery giant H-E-B Stores and chief executive officer of Freight Shuttle Internationals operations unit.
(Excerpt) Read more at blogs.star-telegram.com ...
I can just imagine those on the PA Turnpike, LOL
“Pennies on the dollar” seems pretty reasonable to me.
Over a 250 mile stretch, a 40 ton tractor trailer will use 40gal of diesel at $4/gal and pay a driver $100, for a total of $260.
A diesel electric train uses 25gal to move 40 tons 250 miles (according to CSX commercials, anyway). This is $100 for 250 miles by train.
So this means tractor trailers are 2.5x more expensive than trains. It costs about 50 cents per KWH to generate electricity from diesel. But centrally generated electricity is much cheaper than generating it from diesel on board a train.
The proposed electric tractors would be running on grid electricity at 10 cents per KWH, and would be 5x cheaper than diesel electric trains. So a total factor of 12.5x cheaper than tractor trailers.
That means 8 pennies on the dollar.
Maintenance costs per electric are nothing compared to diesel trucks. The only advantage trucks have is they don’t have to build their own roads while the monorails need to be built.
Plus it looks like it only carries slim chicks with large breasts, no piercings and normal colored hair.
You are neglecting capital costs and Maintenance of Way costs and taxes.
Well it is called a straddle bus.
Plus the costs of railroad workers and their managements.
LOL! Fantastic comment, Zakeet!
I did mention that the trucks have the advantage of not paying for the roads they use while the monorail needs to be built at a capital cost of $2.5B. Divide that $2.5B by all the freight moved over a 50 year lifespan and it is only $50M per year. How many loads a year will travel on that 250 mile leg ? A million ? Ten million ?
Maintenance of roads is included in the fuel tax rather than paid by the individual trucking companies (although there is also the mileage and weight portion of the vehicle tax on big trucks).
Maintenance of the monorail would have to be paid by the operator — presumably out of their 92% operating cost savings compared to trucks.
Yes. You'll want to contact Niagra Freight. Their motto is, "we go fast, all the way down!"
It would be nice to get the trucks out of traffic.
Stop buying things and the trucks will be gone.
I-35 is two lanes each direction is most of Texas. Having one truck trying to pass another stacks up traffic for miiiiles.
I have questions, but I’m assuming this electric transport would be very quiet, which is a major problem with anyone living near truck-packed I35 now.
And think how much safer without 18-wheelers hogging the road.
You’re preachin’ to the choir. :)
If you need to go between Austin and Dallas/Fort Worth, 35 is pretty much your only choice.
Very. They run on rubber tires on the rail instead of metal to metal. The electric motors are very quiet as well even when they’re accelerating but especially when they’re cruising.
I hate to bring up the Disney monorail, but if you’ve ever been around one of those, that’s about the upper limit for the noise level. Another example would be the Dallas or Houston light rail systems - only they’re louder because they are metal to metal drive. Powertrain noise (the hum) should be about the same.
Niagara?
Rubber, pneumatic tires are going to reduce the fuel efficiency over steel on steel.
I don’t believe they’re pneumatic. And ‘rubber’ is actually some sort of advanced polymer or something.
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