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The (very) fast track: Hyperloop’s first test bodes well for 1,100km/h transit system

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A sled speeds down a track during a test of the Hyperloop One propulsion system on Wednesday in North Las Vegas, Nevada. Photo: AP

The possible future of transit zipped along a short track in the desert outside Las Vegas on Wednesday before sending up a wave of sand as it slid to a halt.

Hyperloop One, a start-up hoping to revolutionise transport systems, held its first public test of engine components being designed to rocket pods carrying people or cargo through tubes at speeds of 1,100km/h or more.

The company hopes to realise a futuristic vision laid out three years ago by billionaire Elon Musk, the entrepreneur behind electric car company Tesla and private space exploration endeavour Space X.

Its research and testing in the desert is not simply aimed at making a Hyperloop system possible - its goal is to do it in a low-cost way that makes it possible to spread the technology around the world.

“This is a significant moment for us as a team,” Hyperloop One co-founder Shervin Pishevar said to an invitation-only crowd seated in grandstand seats set up opposite the length of electrified track.

“We are standing on hallowed ground for us; the team has worked incredibly hard to get to what we call our Kitty Hawk preview.”
A wave of sand is thrown up as the Hyperloop One test sled is slowed during the first test of the propulsion system. Photo: AFP
A wave of sand is thrown up as the Hyperloop One test sled is slowed during the first test of the propulsion system. Photo: AFP
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