Magnets are the attraction
Magnets are the attraction.First, powerful magnets lift the entire train about 10 millimeters above the special track, called a guideway, since it mainly directs the passage of the train.
Other magnets provide propulsion, and braking, and the speeds - up to 500 kph in test runs; a good 60 percent faster than the renowned Bullet Trains - are attained largely due to the reduction of friction.
Is there a need for such speed? Certainly not on such a short sprint, barely 30 kilometers from the subway in Pudong to the airport.
And not at the cost, note critics.The Pudong line, which should go into operation by the end of this year, is unlikely to ever recoup its $1.2 billion investment.
A high-speed link between Beijing and Shanghai, among several additional Chinese lines under consideration, might cost $22-30 billion, or nearly as much as China intends to invest in all rail infrastructure nationwide in its current five-year plan.
Still, critics miss the point.And the thrill.The Maglev isn’t about getting from point A to B in Pudong.Rather, it’s the ride, a glorious glide, from the past to the future.
And where this new train might take us, not simply San Francisco to Los Angeles, say, in less than two hours, but in a flash, from the mundane motion of nowadays to the hyper-speeds of Tomorrowland.

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