by Bas » Tue 10 Apr 2007, 14:48:32
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Plantagenet', 'T')rains with these kinds of speeds would be great for the U.S., with our vast distances between cities.
The US could do worse then to duplicate the French rail system and the nuclear power plant system that provides energy for it....we'd get high speed rail, less Greenhouse gas production, and less use of oil all at once.
Germany derives relatively alot of power from nuclear (though not as much as france which is for 90% nuclear) and has the ICE- train all over the country:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', ' ')(Thursday, 4 June, 1998, 10:22 GMT 11:22 UK )
The type of train involved in the German rail disaster is the fastest in the country and carries an average of 65,000 passengers a day.
Inter City Express (ICE) trains are used on express services between major cities and can reach speeds of up to 280 kilometres (175 miles) an hour.
They were developed in the 1980s by a German consortium including the electronics giant Siemens.
In 1985 a prototype became the first rail vehicle in the world to exceed 400kilometres per hour (248mph).
On its introduction to regular service in 1991 the ICE train dramatically reduced journey times.
The travel time for the 850km (475m) Munich-Hamburg route - on which the disaster happened - was cut by more than two hours, to five hours 37 minutes.