Power to the people mover
Suppose the PPM is a purely
electric vehicle with enough battery
capacity to get from home to a
rail terminus and back. This would
most likely be relatively slow driving
over fairly short distances.
The PPM would also have the
electrical and mechanical connections
to the rail system. So you
drive to the terminus where your
PPM hooks up to the rail. Then
the rail controller takes over and
directs the PPM to the rail terminus
nearest your destination
and the driver is now just a passenger.
While en route, the PPM
recharges its battery.
While on the rail portion,
speed and traffic density could
be higher than current highways,
thanks to computer controls.
Once at the destination, the fully
charged PPM disconnects and the
driver takes control.
This system would alleviate
most design issues standing in the
way of pure electric vehicles, give
some measure of personal choice
in style, and provide many of the
benefits of public mass transit
without giving up door-to-door
service. The state (or whatever organization
owns the rail) has reduced
costs because many of the
moving parts would be in privately
owned and maintained PPMs.
The concept could be expanded
to include those who choose not
to buy PPMs by having the rail
operator invest in some rolling
stock to carry them from depot
to depot. This mix of publicly
and privately owned PPMs would
also be beneficial during start-up:
more public PPMs running depot
to depot initially, then more and
more privately owned PPMs as individuals
see the benefits.
Kim L. Ground
Mr. Rapp’s letter does a fairly accurate
job of describing the Personal
Rapid Transit concept developed
by Prof. (Emeritus) J. Edward
Anderson, formerly of the
Mechanical Engineering Dept.
of the University of Minnesota.
His work started in the late 1960s
when he saw that existing rapid
transit was a money pit, just as
Mr. Rapp described it.
Prof. Anderson and his team
of graduate students (and later
his company Taxi2000 and now
PRT International) investigated
rapid transit with the goal of devising
one that made economic
sense and that people would want
to use. They ended up with a system
of small three-passenger cars
moving people in urban areas than any ground transportation
and for about the same cost
as a taxicab. It would not require
ongoing taxpayer subsidies to stay
afloat, unlike light rail, buses, and
subways.
PRT would run at about the
second floor level on guideways
supported by reinforced poles, so
there would be little harm down to
the urban environment and practically
no use of street-level area.
The system could deliver people
and reasonably light packages,
and most urban streets could be
converted to parks over time.
The system uses electricity so
urban transportation would need
little, if any, fossil fuel if we can
produce electricity cheaply and
with minimum environmental
impact (say with nuclear-power
plants).
There would still need to be
other vehicles and many could
be electrically powered, but some would undoubtedly end up needing
an internal-combustion engine.
However, PRTs in urban areas
running on electricity from
nuclear power could reduce
America’s CO2 generation by
around 40% and cause little harm
to our economy or standard of
living. And air quality within our
urban areas would improve.
More information is in white
papers from www.prtnz.com and
www.taxi2000.com.
William J. Brooks
Your answer to Mr. Rapp’s letter
about his idea for a People Mover
was typical of the responses many
ideas get. Your first sentence is
about what you don’t like about
the idea, and then you tell Mr.
Rapp he would be better off to
forget the idea. Looks to me like
your “editor” status and ego got in
the way. In my opinion, Mr. Rapp
was trying to describe his out-of-the-mainstream idea and stimulate
some positive discussion.
When are we ever going to get
away from the urge to put down
new ideas rather than looking at it
with a critical eye, selecting what’s
good about it, and then going on
to improve it? That’s what engineering
is. After analyzing a new
idea, we should try to keep its
good features and improve on the
design. The initial idea might not
be perfect, but a subsequent development
of that idea may reach
the goal.
David F. Carlson
Keeping track of CFLs
I’d like to add my two cents on compact
fluorescent bulbs. In summer
and fall of ’98, I converted all 35 of
the 100-W mercury-vapor sidewalk
and alley lamps of my condo
complex to 27-W (now 23-W)
CFLs. This is in southern California
where it seldom gets to 32°F or below. These are all outside, on
photocells, and run all night. I’m
something of a skeptic, so I kept all
receipts and made careful records.
If a lamp didn’t last at least a year,
it went back for a refund. (Home
Depot was most gracious.)
Maybe colder weather is a factor
in the shorter lifetime results
in other parts of the country. I am
more inclined to suspect power
surges, perhaps caused by lightning.
Mercury-vapor lamps are
almost indestructible. In my experience,
they last well in excess
of 10 years, and the electronics in
the CFLs have got to be relatively
puny.
Bill Kelly
My understanding is that you Californians
are lucky in that your cost
of CFLs is somewhat subsidized by
state and local government.
At any rate, my GE source told me
that a lot of the premature CFL failures they found were due to the bulbs
being used in recessed lighting fixtures
where operating temperatures exceeded
what the bulbs were designed
for. Apparently some CFLs are designed
for recessed lighting, but that’s
a special kind. And this is not entirely
clear from what’s printed on the bulb
packaging. Leland Teschler
Many of the “super cheap” CFLs I
have bought lately have been subsidized
by Southern California
Edison. The latest, a box of four
23-W CFLs with the brand name
“Greenlite,” has a sticker saying
“The price includes a discount
courtesy of Southern California
Edison. The program is funded by
California utility customers and
administered by SCE under the
auspices of the California Public
Utilities Commission.”
I have to assume the discount is
substantial because the price of the
four-bulb box at a discount store was $1.49. However, we are getting
to pay for it through our electric
bills (a relatively local loop) and
not through Federal taxes (which
I suspect would be much more
costly).
I have also seen essentially the
same statement on at least one
other brand of bulb. If there are
other types of subsidies, I am unaware
of them.
I can’t argue with the possibility
of overheating the bulbs. Certainly,
incandescent and mercury bulbs
are required to run comfortably at
high temperatures. However, most
applications would involve putting
a CFL into a fixture built for a
much higher wattage lamp, such as
a 23-W CFL in a fixture rated for a
60 or 100-W incandescent. Overall
it would run much cooler, but if
that is still be too hot is the question.
In most cases I doubt heat
would be a problem.
Bill Kelly