It’s a dream flying car Close to reality, it is no longer part of the world of science fiction in Hollywood, or in one of the versions of the “animation” films, as China is conducting actual experiments on a magnetically powered car.
Chinese researchers at Southwest Jiaotong University in Chengdu, Sichuan Province, conducted road tests last week of modified cars that use magnetic force to rise regarding 35 mm over a railway, according to the official Chinese news agency (Xinhua).
The researchers fitted the sedans with powerful magnets on the car’s floors, allowing the cars to soar over a rail track regarding 5 miles long. While 8 cars were tested in total, one of the cars reached a speed of approximately 143 miles per hour or 240 km / h, according to the report carried by “CNBC” and seen by “Al Arabiya.net”.
A video posted by a Chinese journalist on Twitter shows the vehicles floating along the track, while the Xinhua news agency said state transportation authorities had conducted the tests to study safety measures for high-speed driving, but Deng Zigang, one of the university professors who developed the vehicles, told the state news agency that the use of magnetic levitation Passenger cars have the potential to reduce energy use and increase vehicle range.
This might be a solution to one of the electric car industry’s biggest problems with “range”, with some electric car owners worried that they won’t be able to complete their journey due to running out of power.
Some commercial trains have used magnetic levitation, or “maglev” – which involves electrifying a magnetic field to propel or pull vehicles at high speeds – since the 1980s. Maglev trains are used by China, Japan and South Korea today. Last year, China launched a version of the maglev bullet train in Qingdao, Shandong Province, last year that can reach a top speed of 373 mph or more than 620 km/h.
In theory, the maglev technology allows it to travel at high speed without using as much power as a conventional engine’s power due to the lack of friction. The technology has been proposed for hyperloop projects by The Boring, a subsidiary of billionaire Elon Musk, and Virgin Hyperloop One of British venture capitalist Richard Branson. As researchers have been exploring the potential of maglevs for more than a decade, Volkswagen designed a hovering concept car in 2012.
The idea remains difficult to implement, as building a network of electromagnetic highways would likely take years and a massive public investment in any country.