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1. Is PRT "reinventing the automobile?
No! PRT is a
public transit system. It cannot replace the automobile, but its service
characteristics are such that it can be expected to attract many more people
than conventional transit systems, and it can do so using a tiny fraction of
the land required for the automobile. While roughly half the population either
cannot or should not be driving automobiles, PRT is accessible to everyone. It
will be the environmentalist's dream because of its markedly improved energy
efficiency, lack of air pollution, and land savings. Normally the guideways
should be spaced not less than a quarter to a half mile apart. They do not
replace streets. Return to Top of Page.
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2. Can small cars move the large numbers of people who would use
general mass transit?
Today, automobiles averaging 1.2 people per
vehicle carry more than 97 percent of the urban passenger-miles in the United
States. Uninterrupted flow is the key to capacity, not vehicle size. As an
example, 60-passenger buses coming two minutes apart, a very high flow rate for
an American bus system, provide the same number of capacity units per hour as
3-passenger PRT vehicles coming every six seconds. One PRT line can serve more
than six times this capacity, more passengers per hour than come into downtown
Boston during the morning rush period via a three-lane expressway.
The line capacity is high because of
automatic control, an in-vehicle switch, and electromagnetic propulsion and
braking. Automatic control is safer and more reliable than human drivers,
permitting vehicles to be separated by small distances. In-vehicle switches
work faster and more reliably than moving-track switches, again permitting
vehicles to be closely spaced on the guideway. Linear electromagnetic braking
is reliable in wet and icy weather that forces systems using rotary motors and
wheel braking to spread vehicles far apart because of skidding concerns in
emergency stops. Return to Top of Page.
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3. Won't stations get bogged down with all the small
vehicles?Station throughput is determined by the number of station
berths, which can be set to meet the demand of any particular station. In
general, station throughput is high relative to conventional mass transit
because:
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| Taxi 2000 station inside a
building. |
- Only vehicles
that actually need to stop at a station will enter the station. All other
vehicles pass by, thus reducing station traffic relative to conventional
systems where all vehicles stop in each station regardless of where passengers
are going.
- PRT stations
are closely spaced, often within a quarter mile of each other. This is
convenient to patrons, who walk only short distances, and results in smaller,
less crowded stations.
- The loading
time for each vehicle is relatively short, usually completed in a few seconds.
As people become accustomed to PRT systems, they will enter and exit vehicles
as quickly as cars, increasing station throughput and minimizing trip
time.
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4. Won't the problems of reliability make the operation of a large
fleet of small vehicles undependable? Actually, because a PRT system
will have a large number of small vehicles, rather than a relatively small
number of large vehicles, the chance of an individual becoming involved in a
failure will reduce in proportion to vehicle size if the reliability of each
vehicle is the same. But, because of the use of checked redundancy and advanced
failure-management strategies possible within the confines of a PRT system, and
the benign environment within the guideway, the reliability of it will be
substantially higher than a conventional transit system. It has been shown that
the requirements for dependability in a PRT system are independent of system
size. Return to Top of Page. |
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5. What happens if a PRT vehicle stops on an elevated guideway
between stations? Questions of reliability, safety, evacuation and
rescue are fundamental to the design of any elevated transit system including
PRT. Each vehicle has two motors and two controllers, modern failure-monitoring
systems, fault-tolerance and fail-safe features. The system has alternative
power sources so that a power failure will not leave passengers
stranded.
There are over 70 elevated automated transit
systems operating in the world today that prove that a vehicle stopping when
not intended is a very rare event. If a vehicle does stop between stations,
Central Control will talk with the passengers through an intercom system and
guide the rescue operation. The vehicle behind will soft engage and push the
disabled vehicle to the nearest station. In the very unlikely event that the
vehicle can't be moved, a rescue team will come with a ladder and help the
passengers out of the vehicle. Return to Top of
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6. What if there is a power failure? The vehicles
receive their power from DC power rails located inside the guideway. There will
always be an alternative power source. One way is to power the system from two
different utilities, so that if one fails the other is immediately available to
take over. A second way is to power the system from gas turbine-generator sets
and to use utility power as emergency backup. A third way, appropriate for
maximum energy and peak-power conservation, is to power the vehicles from
wayside batteries, which can be charged at night when the power rate is low.
During a municipal power failure, vehicles would still receive battery power,
so they would simply slow down to conserve energy, finish their trips, and
strand no passengers. A fourth way is to use large flywheels as back-up power
sources. Return to Top of Page. |
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7. What if a truck hits a post? If the guideway runs
down the center of an arterial street or on the edge of such a street, highway
barriers can be placed to protect the posts or they can be placed on concrete
pedestals so that it is not possible for vehicles to hit the posts. The posts
are, however, substantial enough so that it would take a high-speed collision
of a large truck to shear off a post. If a post were sheared, the guideway will
remain intact and the vehicles will remain in the guideway.
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8. Will the visual impact of PRT be acceptable? Visual
impact is important in all transit systems. Many rail transit systems are
placed underground because a ground-level system requires destruction of too
much existing property and an elevated system is too massive and noisy. A PRT
guideway has less than five percent of the cross sectional area of a rapid rail
system, will generate almost no noise, and has an external appearance that can
be varied to suit any specific community. According to one famous sculptor, PRT
adds excitement and grandeur to the urban scene, both for what it is and what
it does.
People accept elevated structures if they
see them as a practical means to a desired end. In the early 1970s, when
conventional heavy rail systems were being promoted, officials argued that
elevated structures were acceptable. The People Movers proposed in the late
1970s had massive structures (witness the Detroit and Miami People Movers) but
local authorities considered them acceptable because they were believed to
fulfill a need. Taxi 2000 will have much smaller visual impact
and will provide much better service at lower cost. Return to Top of Page. |
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9.
How does a person use PRT? At each station, there will be several
conveniently located ticket machines and a map of the system. The patron, or
small group of patrons who want to ride together, determine their destination
number from the map and go to the ticket machine to punch in the destination.
The machine verifies the destination and displays the fare, which may be paid
by cash or by prepaid ticket and is per vehicle rather than per person. The
machine then dispenses a magnetically coded ticket.
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| At the ticketing
machine. |
The patron
takes the ticket to a stanchion in front of the first empty vehicle in a line
of vehicles and inserts it into a slot. This act transfers the memory of the
destination to a microprocessor aboard the vehicle, causes the door to open,
and assures the patron that he or she is getting on a vehicle headed to his or
her station.
The patron or patrons walk into the vehicle,
sit down and press a go-button, whereupon the door closes automatically, the
control system waits for an opening in the traffic bypassing the station and
commands the vehicle to accelerate to line speed. When the vehicle reaches the
destination station, it pulls into a berth and opens the door automatically.
The patron(s) exit the vehicle and leave the station.
If the patron is regularly going between a
certain station pair, he or she can purchase a pass in advance, bypass the
ticket machine and go directly to the stanchion in front of the first empty
vehicle. PRT doesn't need turnstiles since a valid ticket is necessary to gain
access to a vehicle. Return to Top of
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10. Is it possible to stop before the end of the ordered trip?
Yes. A stop button will be mounted on the control panel of each
vehicle, which if pressed stops the vehicle at the next station.
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| Vehicles are ADA
compliant. |
11. What about access for the
handicapped? PRT will be fully accessible to handicapped patrons and
will comply with the Americans With Disabilities Act. Elevators will be
provided in elevated stations and the ticket machines and stanchions will
include intercoms and Braille plaques to insure ease of use by all patrons. The
vehicle accommodates wheelchairs riding sideways, with a jump seat for one
traveling companion. The platform is level with the vehicle floor to prevent
wheelchair bumps and is textured at the edge to assist the blind.
Taxi 2000 is designed to be easily
accessible to all people, whether handicapped, young, old, carrying heavy bags,
traveling with a bicycle, or have any other special need. It has been praised
and promoted by groups representing the needs of the handicapped.
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12. How much time does a person have to board a PRT vehicle?
As much time as is necessary. The vehicle will not move until the
passengers have entered and the door is closed and locked. Loading or unloading
time is a statistical variable, which varies from a minimum of about two
seconds to a maximum of 10 to 15 seconds. Return to
Top of Page. |
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13. Will you have to ride with strangers? No! Each
vehicle is occupied by passengers riding alone or together by choice. If
someone tries to force his way into a vehicle, a button can be pushed inside
the vehicle to alert the police. Return to Top of
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14. Can a PRT vehicle be entered from either side? Yes.
It is not in general practical to design a PRT network in such a way that all
stations are on one side of the guideway. Therefore the cars are
designed with doors on both sides, but only the door on the station side opens
when the vehicle stops. Return to Top of
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15. How serious a problem is vandalism? Vandalism is
minimized in the following ways:
By Surveillance. The stations will be
television monitored with two-way voice communication. They are small areas
that can be surveyed easily, and infrared detectors will be used to detect the
presence of people so that the operator, in slack times, need not constantly
view the screen.
By Identification. A means will be
provided to permit a boarding passenger to reject a vandalized vehicle. An
alarm signal will then be sent to the nearest control room where a human
operator is alerted to roll back a video memory unit and make a permanent
record of the last passenger to egress from the vandalized vehicle, and to
command the vehicle to the nearest maintenance shop. Normal police methods will
then be used to apprehend the vandal. Experience at the Morgantown automated
people mover system has shown that knowledge of such a procedure, not possible
in conventional transit, will by itself deter most vandalism.
By Psychology. In public places,
vandalism has been greatly reduced by the application of human psychology (see
Psychology Today, September 1982). Plain walls that look like writing
tablets invite being written on. Textured walls and walls with diagonal lines
or protrusions markedly reduce graffiti. Appropriate colors, music,
architectural design, and plants reduce vandalism. Frequently cleaned public
places are not as subject to vandalism as dirty ones.
By use of Attendants. In large
stations or in stations unusually prone to vandalism it is not unreasonable
economically to use attendants, and they may be used if other methods fail.
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16. Won't Personal Security be a serious problem?
Personal security is less of a problem than in conventional mass
transit, and even sometimes less than in automobiles, for the following
reasons:
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The ride is
nonstop, direct to the destination, and alone or with one or two other people
of choice. One never rides with strangers.
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Computer
simulations have shown that in a well-designed system in the rush period about
50 percent of the passengers will wait less than 30 to 40 seconds and 97
percent less than three minutes. During off-peak periods there is no waiting at
all. Thus there is little time for commission of acts of aggression.
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Television
monitors and two-way voice-communication systems will be placed in the stations
to survey the platform, stairways and vehicles. To insure that the screens will
be watched, infrared sensors will be placed in the stations to alert the
monitoring personal of activity in each station.
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The station
platform is typically no longer that 20 to 40 feet and about 12 feet wide, and
is easy to watchmuch easier than a large, multi-story parking structure.
Care in station design will eliminate areas in which a potential assailant can
hide.
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A stop
button in the vehicle permits the passenger to order the vehicle to stop at the
next station for any reason.
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A voice
communications system will be installed in each vehicle to be used to call for
help in any emergency.
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17. Won't the issues of safety make it difficult to insure a PRT
system? The insurance rate for the first operational Taxi
2000 system will be based on the insurer's estimate of the frequency
and severity of bodily injury sustained while riding, attending to, or being in
proximity of the system. In today's litigious society, it would not do to rush
such a system to completion and to permit the public to ride before it was
thoroughly tested. Every reasonable practical precaution must be taken in the
design of a new PRT system to assure safety, and there will be an adequate
period of testing before opening the system for public use.
An extensive series of design features are
incorporated into Taxi 2000 both to minimize the probability of
failures that may cause injury, and to minimize the consequences of any
failure. A remarkable characteristic of PRT is that, because the vehicles are
small and light, it is practical to design to assure that no combination of
failures can cause injury. The developers of Taxi 2000 are
convinced that its system will provide a substantial improvement in both safety
and personal security.
Obtaining a reasonable insurance rate for a
PRT system depends not only on the design features but also on the program of
development and testing undertaken before the public can ride. Before building
a demonstration for public use, a half-mile oval test system with one off-line
station and four prototype vehicles will be tested. Based on the results of the
test program, the first real people-moving demonstration will be constructed,
tested, and certified for public use before the public will be permitted to
ride. Potential insurers will be invited to monitor the test program in
sufficient detail to establish the insurance rate. Return to Top of Page. |
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18. Isn't there an economy of scale in transit systems, i. e., to
carry a given traffic level, won't a system of many small vehicles cost more
than a system of a few large vehicles? The basic features of PRT
follow logically as features that minimize the total cost per passenger-mile.
These features permit true minimization of guideway cost, vehicle-fleet cost,
and operating cost while maximizing service.
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| Vehicle Cost per Unit
Capacity |
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Data shows
that transit vehicles cost about the same per unit of capacity no matter how
large or small they are. Contrary to intuition, there is no economy of scale.
By using nonstop trips, possible with off-line stations, the average trip time
of a PRT system is two to three times less than in a conventional transit
system, which means that the fleet capacity (number of vehicles x capacity per
vehicle) and therefore fleet cost needed to serve a given number of trips is
less by the same factor.
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Vehicles of
the size required to hold up to three or four seated adults have a much smaller
cross section and weigh substantially less per unit of length than large
standing-passenger vehicles, and, because of much lower dynamic loading, lead
to lower guideway weight (15 times lower) and lower cost.
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To compare
operating and maintenance (O&M) costs, we define a quantity called a
"place-mile." The number of place-miles of travel in a transit system
consisting of vehicles or trains of any size is the number of vehicle-miles of
travel multiplied by vehicle capacity. A vehicle-mile is one vehicle traveling
one mile. Because PRT vehicles move only when service is demanded, the total
number of place-miles per day required to serve a given level of passenger
demand is only about a third as much as in a conventional scheduled transit
system. Examination of data on O&M costs shows that the O&M cost per
place-mile is nearly the same regardless of the type of transit system. Thus
the O&M cost of a transit system that carries a given number of people per
day is proportional to the number of place-miles per day of travel.
The remarkable result of this kind of
systems-economic analysis is a transit system in which the features required to
minimize both capital and operating costs are exactly those that provide
maximum service, i. e., on-demand, alone or with one or two friends, in seated
comfort, any time of day or night, at a predictable average speed two to three
times that possible with conventional transit. The only reason for using large
vehicles in urban transportation is to amortize the wages of drivers over as
many fare-paying riders as possible. Automation permits relaxation of system
characteristics toward a true optimum. Return to Top
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19. How much will a ride cost? Transit fares are
normally set as a matter of public policy, and are as high as the public will
bear without significantly reducing ridership. In most conventional systems,
the fare covers only about 30% of the operating cost and capital cost is never
recovered. Thus, present transit systems require large state and federal
subsidies.
Because of its low capital and operating
costs, PRT systems will be able to charge fares that are comparable to
conventional mass transit, yet will require little or no subsidy. This will
permit systems to be installed in communities that need transit but don't have
access to large state and federal subsidies. Return to
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20. How Was the Vehicle Size Selected? On a strictly
economic basis, one-person vehicles minimize capital cost, but they do not
serve obvious social needs. Two-person vehicles are too small for a small
family, for taking luggage, or for a wheelchair plus attendant. Also, if a
party of three wants to travel together, one of them would have to ride alone
if the vehicles hold only two persons, which may be socially awkward. So the
vehicle should have room for at least three seats side-by side. If the vehicle were
to have to accommodate a wheelchair which can rotate to face forward, the floor
area is such that there can be two forward-facing seats in the back and two
backward-facing seats in the front, which could normally fold up to accommodate
the wheelchair. This provides a socially pleasant configuration for occasional
use by two couples, but requires the vehicle to be longer, which increases
vehicle weight and cost, and station length and cost. (An alternative is to
provide special vehicles for wheelchairs, which would be on call by cellular
telephone on short notice.)
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| Interior of 3-Passenger
Cab |
From the
viewpoint of ultimate safety, a passenger can be protected in a sudden stop if
he or she is behind a padded dashboard. The above four-passenger configuration
has a much longer throw distance than a side-by-side seating configuration and
therefore greater probability of injury in the unlikely event of a sudden stop.
Since each vehicle will be controlled by a pair of checked-redundant
fault-tolerant computers, the probability of a sudden stop will be low, yet
such a stop must be considered in the design.
Since more than 95 percent of the trips in
an urban area are taken by one, two or three persons travelling together, the
more people an individual vehicle is required to accommodate, the more vehicle dead
weight there is per person carried and higher capital and energy cost. By
charging a fare per vehicle rather than per person, it is possible that the
average vehicle occupancy can be increased over that experienced with
automobiles.
We see that the factors that must be
considered in picking vehicle capacity are not the same in PRT as in a family
automobile. A PRT trip is generally quite short and a group larger than can fit
into one vehicle can take two or more vehicles, which leave the origin station
seconds apart and arrive at the destination seconds apart. Taxi
2000 is designed to carry a total load of 650 lbs.
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21. Why are the vehicles mounted above the guideway rather than
below? A variety of issues must be considered in making this
tradeoff:
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Switching. The running surfaces for
supported vehicles are continuous through switch sections, whereas with hanging
vehicles, there must be a slot in the guideway through which an arm that
supports the vehicle passes. Thus, in a switch section the support element
inside the guideway must pass across the slot, so the supporting load must be
transferred to another member. In the Monocab PRT system this required an extra
set of wheels that engaged slots in the top inside of the guideway. With maglev
the load would probably be transferred to a set of electromagnets. This extra
load-transfer means adds extra weight and cost, and reduces reliability. The
bottom line is that the fundamental requirement of switching is much easier
with supported vehicles.
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Visual
Impact. A group at the University of Minnesota worked in the PRT field for
13 years before deciding it was necessary to initiate the design of a new PRT
system. During this time, we conducted three international conferences on PRT
and were deeply involved in a fourth conference held by the Advanced Transit
Association in Indianapolis in 1978. In addition, we gave hundreds of
presentations on PRT in many places in the United States and abroad and were
involved in a number of PRT planning studies. Moreover, our group was funded by
UMTA to study the visual impact of AGT systems, and worked with people at the
Volpe National Transportation Systems Center on this subject. Out of this
experience, we were extremely sensitized to the issue of visual impact of
overhead structures. Both the supported and hanging systems must have the same
clearance, so the guideway of the hanging system is six to eight feet higher
and must be supported by posts with right angle arms at the top to reach out
and support the guideway in such a way that the vehicle can pass underneath.
The guideway of the supported-vehicle system is lower and the posts are
smaller, so, all else being equal, the visual impact is substantially less.
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Cost of
Posts and Foundations. Because the guideway of the hanging-vehicle system
is higher from the ground, the bending moment at the base of the posts due to
the maximum crosswind for which the system is designed is higher than in the
case of the supported-vehicle system. Moreover, in the hanging-vehicle system
the weight of the guideway and the vehicles adds an additional bending moment
at the base of the posts. The maximum load condition is fully loaded vehicles
nose-to-tail along the guideway. With this load condition and the maximum
lateral wind load, we found that the bending moment at the foundation is about
twice as much with the hanging-vehicle system as with the supported-vehicle
system. So both the posts and the foundations will be correspondingly larger.
Yet to avoid utilities and to fit the foundations in, the smaller foundation is
preferred.
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Torsion in
Curves. If the vehicle hangs from the guideway and is provided with a
critically damped swivel joint, as it passes through a curve it will swing out
as in a coordinated turn of an airplane. Thus the passenger is not subject to
much lateral acceleration. If the vehicle is supported above the guideway, the
guideway must be superelevated or banked to reduce the lateral acceleration on
the passenger. With the hanging vehicle in curves, the torques due to
centrifugal force and gravity subtract, whereas with the supported vehicle they
add. This seems like a deciding factor, however, the wall thickness of the
guideway required to resist a given torque increases as only the cube root of
the torque, and from detailed analysis we found that the wall thickness to
support a given torque with the supported vehicle is only 13% greater than with
the hanging vehicle. This consideration will, therefore, not be an over riding
factor, and other factors must be considered.
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System
Natural Frequency. With the vehicles on top of the guideway, the guideway
can be clamped to the posts as first suggested by Dr. Jack Irving in
Fundamentals of PRT. From basic structures theory, the maximum deflection of a
beam clamped at both ends is only 20% of the maximum deflection of a simply
supported beam and the natural frequency is 2.26 times higher. If the vehicles
hang from the guideway, the post must be along side of the guideway and a
horizontal element must be added over the top of the guideway to support it. It
is not practical to make this longer element as stiff as the clamped support,
which means that to have the same deflection and natural frequency as the
guideway of a system with supported vehicles, the guideway of the
hanging-vehicle system must be heavier. This fact more than counteracts the
increased thickness of the supported guideway discussed in point
#4.
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Vehicle
Weight. The weight of a supported vehicle and its load is supported at the
bottom of the chassis so that the maximum load on the cabin is due only to wind
and passenger loads. The weight of a hanging vehicle and its load must be
supported by the sidewalls of the cabin, which, all else being equal, would
require that they be heavier.
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Underground System. If the system is
placed underground, the guideway of the supported vehicle can be laid on the
ground whereas with the hanging vehicle, the guideway must still support the
vehicle. This means that there will be a cost savings in using supported
vehicles underground.
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Public
Preference. On its test track, the Cabintaxi PRT guideway was designed and
built to support vehicles both above and below the guideway. Many people rode
the system and their reactions were recorded and reported in an assessment
report developed jointly by the U. S. DOT and a German consulting firm. The
result was that somewhat more people preferred riding above the guideway than
below.
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Passing
Through Buildings. If the guideway is below the vehicle, it blocks any
cross traffic due to pedestrians or carts. If the guideway is above the vehicle
and there is adequate clearance below, the system would not interfere with
cross traffic. Therefore this factor favors the hanging vehicle provided the
ceiling is high enough.
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Snow, Ice,
Debris. A major argument for the hanging-vehicle system is that there need
be no worry about interference with snow, ice, or debris. For the
supported-vehicle PRT system to be successful, this situation must be addressed
very carefully. In the Taxi 2000 PRT system, the guideway is a truss structure
with a cover over it that provides eight benefits, one of which is to keep out
ice, snow and other debris. We found that the chassis, which is constrained
within a U-shaped guideway need only be four inches wide and the slot through
which it passes need be only five inches wide, giving a nominal half-inch
clearance on each side. The main support tires, which are cushion
synthetic-rubber tires, are supported on eight inch by six inch by half inch
steel angles, and there is a slot eight inches wide between them. We have
designed a plow that will pick up any foreign substance on the running surfaces
and toss it down in the eight-inch gap. The plow has been tested in winter
conditions and has been found to be completely satisfactory.
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22. Why are the moving switch parts in the vehicle rather than in
the guideway? There are five reasons an in-vehicle switch is
superior to a moving-track switch.
Reliability. The simplicity of the
in-vehicle switch makes it inherently more reliable than the in-track switch,
and an in-vehicle switch can easily be made bi-stable by means of a spring. The
worst that can happen with a well-designed in-vehicle switch is that one small
vehicle will be misdirected, whereas if an in-track switch fails, it ties up a
whole line of traffic, thus delaying many people. Also, the in-track switch
requires an electric or hydraulic actuator mounted in the guideway, which upon
failure shuts down the line. The result is that the required reliability cannot
realistically be attained if the switch is in the track, but is easily attained
if the switch is in the vehicle.
Capacity. Because of the time
required 1) to move an in-track switch, 2) to verify that it is locked in
position, and 3) to be able to stop before the vehicle reaches the switch if
verification is not obtained, the minimum time headway will be too long to be
of use in a PRT system. An in-vehicle switch completely removes this barrier to
high capacity.
Ride Comfort. In-track switches often
consist of a series of articulated straight pieces of guideway that swing back
and forth. Passengers will feel such a strong lateral jerk each time the
vehicle passes one of the joints that the vehicle will have to slow down for
every passage, and there can be four or five straight pieces in each switch. An
in-vehicle switch permits guideway branch points to be made with simple smooth
curves, maximizing passenger comfort and minimizing jerk loads on the
undercarriage of the vehicle.
Visual Impact. Articulated in-track
switches with their actuators attached greatly increase the visual impact of a
switch section. Beyond simply being much larger than a simple branch section,
in-track switches have a track leading into empty space, which is a
discomforting view for passengers as well as passers by.
Cost. An in-vehicle switch has very
few moving parts and is very simple and inexpensive to build. An in-track
switch is much larger, often consisting of several articulated track sections
that move back and forth, and contains many large parts which increase both
capital and maintenance cost significantly. Return to
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23. Are one-way guideways practical? Because of the
very small guideway and in-vehicle switching, one-way guideways are an
option, but not a necessity. If the guideways are one-way, for a
given investment, twice as much land area can be placed within walking distance
of stations as with two-way systems. If planners want two-way systems, they are
easily provided. We have analyzed the problem of extra trip circuitry with
one-way guideways and find that, with a reasonable layout, the extra travel
time going nonstop from origin to destination is so small that the cost per
passenger-mile is generally less with a one-way system.
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24. Will magnetic levitation help PRT? Not at urban
speeds. Comparisons of systems levitated by magnetic fields, air cushions, and
wheels shows that, by using low-rolling-resistance tires, there is no advantage
of either magnetic or air suspension over wheels at urban speeds, and indeed
serious disadvantages. Return to Top of
Page. |
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25. Can PRT be complimentary to other transit systems?
Absolutely! This is a major advantage of PRT.
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26. Where are vehicles stored when not in use? In an
n-berth station, n vehicles can be stored when there are no
demands for service. During the night when demand is low or zero, the bulk of
the vehicles will be stored at special storage barns strategically located in
the network, usually at the same locations as cleaning and routine maintenance
facilities. Because it is not necessary to get a specific vehicle out of
storage before the others, the volume of storage facilities per mile of
guideway is usually not more than would be required to store about four or five
automobiles in a multistory parking structure. Return
to Top of Page. |
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27. What will be the cruising speed? The first
Taxi 2000 systems will be designed to operate at line speeds
between 20 and 40 mph, and speeds up to at least 80 mph are practical for later
applications. Return to Top of Page.
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28. How is ride comfort assured? Taxi
2000 differs from other automated guideway transit systems in that the
running surfaces are adjustable with respect to the basic guideway frame, which
is built to normal structural tolerances. Before service is started, ride
comfort is tested, adjustments are made and the running surfaces are firmly
bolted in place. (In other systems, it is virtually impossible to correct any
misalignment once the guideway is installed.) The vehicles run on smooth
synthetic rubber tires of stiffness needed to meet ride-comfort criteria. Since
the running surfaces are smooth and adjustable, secondary suspension is not
needed. Return to Top of Page. |
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29. How is snow, ice or debris kept from interfering with
operations? The Taxi 2000 guideway is a truss
structure with covers over the sides and part of the top and bottom. There is a
six-inch-wide slot at the top for the vehicle's vertical chassis to pass
through, and an eight-inch-wide slot at the bottom to permit ice, snow, rain,
or debris to fall through. A pair of 7.5-inch-wide running surfaces (angle
sections) inside the guideway near the bottom support the main wheels and are
spaced six inches apart to permit anything that may drop in the top to pass
through.
Running vehicles continuously during snow or
ice storms will usually be sufficient to clear the running surfaces; but we
have designed and tested a plow that, if necessary, will be installed on
vehicles to deflect anything that lands on one of the running surfaces down
into the slot between. A maintenance vehicle will occasionally inspect the
interior of the guideway with a television camera and will be equipped to
remove any foreign material. Return to Top of
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30. What about energy use? Because of frequent stopping
and starting, about two thirds of the operating energy used by today's transit
vehicles or automobiles in an urban area is kinetic energy lost in heat as the
vehicle is braked to a stop. Therefore, elimination of the intermediate stops
by itself almost triples energy efficiency.
Careful attention to vehicle-weight
minimization, streamlining, lowering of road resistance by careful selection of
tire parameters, and use of electric propulsion that eliminates idling energy
add to efficiency, putting PRT in a class by itself in terms of energy efficiency.
The electrical energy use will be less than 200 watt-hours per vehicle-mile.
The power will peak at about 20 kw per vehicle and will average about 4 kW per
vehicle. Return to Top of Page. |
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31. What about air pollution? Taxi 2000vehicles
run on 600 volt DC electricity that can be supplied from wayside batteries or
flywheels that can be charged by any electrical energy source including
renewable energy such as wind, solar, or biomass. The system produces air
pollution only in the processes of manufacture and at the power plant, both of
which can be closely controlled. Return to Top of
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32. How quiet is the operation of a PRT vehicle?
Movement of the vehicles will be much quieter than automobiles. They
are propelled and braked through linear electric motors, which are driven by
variable-frequency drives. Such drives may produce a humming sound, which is
minimized by careful design and by sound insulation. Since there is no braking
or traction through the wheels, the tires are smooth and they run on smooth
surfaces, so the tire noise will be substantially less than produced by an
automobile. There are no other noise-producing elements.
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33. Will the use of electric and magnetic components adversely
affect the health of riders? Because the vehicles weigh a small
fraction of conventional rail transit vehicles, the electric current required
is correspondingly less and any magnetic field in the cabin will be
proportional to the current. While there are at present no generally accepted
safety standards that limit human exposure to magnetic fields, care has been
exercised in the design of the vehicles to minimize the exposure of passengers
to magnetic fields.
The motors are designed to constrain the
magnetic fields to their immediate vicinity and are located remotely from the
passenger compartment, which also desirably lowers the center of gravity of the
vehicle. Residents living or working near a PRT guideway will not be exposed to
any significant increase in magnetic fields since the power to the vehicles is
provided from 600-volt DC power rails inside a shielded guideway. Harmful
effects of transmission lines have been reported only when the lines carry
several hundred thousand volts. Return to Top of
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34. Will PRT guideways withstand earthquakes and high winds?
The elevated guideway is designed to the local code for maximum
accelerations during earthquakes and the maximum expected wind load. The
guideway is a small, light-weight, flexible, steel structure with thermal
expansion joints in every span, a configuration well suited to surviving
earthquakes and high winds. The possibility of aeroelastic coupling such as
caused the collapse of the Tacoma Narrows bridge has been studied, and it was
found that features that prevent such catastrophes are exactly those selected
for the Taxi 2000 guideway for other reasons.
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35. Can a bicycle be taken aboard a Taxi 2000 PRT
vehicle?There are two ways to load a bicycle on a PRT vehicle:
either on a rack outside, or inside. With our 50-inch interior width and
room for a wheelchair, most bikes with one person would fit inside, and that
would be the fastest and safest way to load. We have definitely included
the need to accommodate a bicycle in our specifications for the PRT vehicle
cabin. We have always seen compatibility between bikers and PRT, both
because a fraction of the population would like to bike to and from PRT
stations, and because bikeways and walkways can be placed on the ground under a
PRT line. Return to Top of Page. |
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36. How can we be so sure of the characteristics of Taxi
2000 in advance of testing? Because the design has been reviewed
so thoroughly and because it was found that achievement of the characteristics
described is well within the state-of-art. Return to
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37. Why has it taken so long to get true PRT into operation?
The PRT concept germinated in the early 1950s and received enough
attention by the mid 1960s to be the subject of government-funded analysis. By
the early 1970s, there were many competing ideas on how to design automated
transit systems, but there was no theory of PRT and there were insufficient
funds to explore the dozens of alternative design features. This "Tower of
Babel" discouraged decision makers, caused government funding to dry up, and
left the continued search for an optimum configuration up to a few people.
A
major reason it was possible in the 1980s to carry PRT research and development
far enough to regain the attention of major transit decision makers was the
emergence of the personal computer and associated software. Finding the optimum
transit configuration and proving it required sophisticated and data-intensive
engineering and economic calculations, detailed simulations of control and
vehicle dynamics, and a great deal of data processing, which during the 1970s
was much slower and required large resources, generally funded only by
governments. The PC enabled engineers of ordinary means to purchase enough
computer power to develop the optimum system and element designs. In parallel,
the development of powerful fault-tolerant microprocessors and software
elements have placed the control requirements of PRT well within the current
state-of-art.
While many new ideas have emerged from
institutional research during this century, new ideas in previous centuries
generally emerged only when the individuals who discovered and developed them
could do so without anyone else's approval. Development of PRT required
understanding of engineering sciences and sophisticated technology of the 20th
century melded with the individual initiative of earlier centuries, a marriage
made possible by the low-cost, high-performance personal computer.
The PC and the microcomputer, coupled with
the development of the necessary transit systems theory, test and operational
experience with a wide variety of automated transit systems, the realization
that conventional rail transit systems cannot solve the problems of congestion
in cities, and the steady worsening of congestion and air pollution have made
it possible for the idea of PRT to reemerge.
Careful research over decades has shown no
flaw that will or should stop the development of PRT, but rather that PRT is a
badly needed solution to a variety of transit problems. It is a new
configuration of now very ordinary parts well within the current state-of-art.
Development of new concepts in public
transportation differs from development of many other emerging concepts in that
the resources needed to prove a concept are large, many people are involved in
deciding to take a positive step, the level of credibility must be unusually
high, and the "fear factor" that drove military programs is not present. In
such circumstances, it is not surprising that several decades have been
required to bring the concept of PRT to maturity.
A
relevant quote from Machiavelli's masterpiece "The Prince":
"It must be realized that there is nothing
more difficult to plan, more uncertain of success, or more dangerous to manage
than the establishment of a new order of government [or a new system (J.
Edward Anderson)]; for he who introduces it makes enemies of all those who
derived advantage from the old order and finds but lukewarm defenders among
those who stand to gain from the new one. Such a lukewarm attitude grows
partly out of fear of the adversaries, who have the law on their side, and
partly from the incredulity of men in general, who actually have no faith in
new things until they have been proved by experience. Hence it happens
that whenever those in the enemy camp have a chance to attack, they do so with
partisan fervor, while the others defend themselves rather passively, so that
both they and the prince are endangered."
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38. When? This has been the one real concern about PRT.
There is active interest in more and more cities and countries. The
possibilities are exciting. Many people have given of their free time because
they have seen in PRT a means for a profound improvement in the functioning of
urban areas. Those willing to listen, study and compare are seeing that in
greater and greater numbers. A critical mass of interest is developing.
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