SquatchWithNoHeroes
SquatchWithNoHeroes t1_j1aki7g wrote
Reply to comment by swistak84 in Elon Musk posts on Weibo about how action matters more than words and gets an earful from disgruntled Chinese netizens by Saltedline
I'm pretty sure that even that whitepaper doesn't suggest something that is meant to resist inward pressure instead of outward pressure
SquatchWithNoHeroes t1_j1aj5n9 wrote
Reply to comment by swistak84 in Elon Musk posts on Weibo about how action matters more than words and gets an earful from disgruntled Chinese netizens by Saltedline
Nobody is suggesting you build it with the materials of a thin pressure vessel .
SquatchWithNoHeroes t1_j1a22mn wrote
Reply to comment by swistak84 in Elon Musk posts on Weibo about how action matters more than words and gets an earful from disgruntled Chinese netizens by Saltedline
Obviously, the containment would be built out of concrete.
Otherwise it would be impossible, it would collapse on itself by stress alone rather quickly.
Anyway, my point is that Hyperloop is like wanting to make the concorde without making the 707 first.
And it may very well like the concorde end up being not practical.
Frankly, I don't see the need to be faster than 400km/h . That's what videoconferences are for
SquatchWithNoHeroes t1_j19bcef wrote
Reply to comment by swistak84 in Elon Musk posts on Weibo about how action matters more than words and gets an earful from disgruntled Chinese netizens by Saltedline
Hyperloop CAN be realistically built.
But not with our current technology.
First we need to get regular maglevs on working order and then we can begin thinking on vaccum sealing them.
And then it probably will not make a difference, Hell, the amount of concrete needed may very well offset the energy consumption. Nevermind the issue of a single guy with a drill being able to stop the whole line (and maybe cause a big incident if a train happens to just be going through.)
SquatchWithNoHeroes t1_j19apg1 wrote
Reply to Elon Musk posts on Weibo about how action matters more than words and gets an earful from disgruntled Chinese netizens by Saltedline
Dam man, imagine being so hungry for mockery.
SquatchWithNoHeroes t1_jaesgu9 wrote
Reply to comment by SILENTSAM69 in Britain breaks 'green grid' record with latest 100 per cent clean power milestone by Wagamaga
Yes and no.
Depending on enviroment
Swamp, boggy terrains trap large amounts of CO2. On the other hand, the anaerobic decomposition that often occurs in such enviroments can emit large amounts of methane.
And expanding forests creates a net loss, while cutting them down obviously emits CO2.
All in all, forest can't be simply be grown magically, not all areas are suitable for forests. And I don't see many countries capable of embarking into antidesertification campaigns like China succesfuly.