And that's 1 ton of freight (payload), so it doesn't count the mass of the train itself!The 100mpg target is not impossible. GE claims their Diesel-electric locomotives move 1 ton 500 miles per gallon of diesel. that's 250 mils for a 2-ton car then a 15% loss to use gasoline vs diesel, down to 220 miles. I understand that rails are different than roads and the drafting that each rail-car gets from the engine and previous cars add to aerodynamics but the tires used on these hyper-mile test vehicles and cockpit design are not always realistic either. Just trying to bring a perspective that such efficiency is possible (if few start/stop cycles and few hills are in your path).
But one huge difference between a train and a car is the stop-and-go. I installed a driving computer in my old '75 Bronco, that averaged 10 mpg under pretty much any conditions, and it provided real-time fuel-flow rate and mileage. On a level highway at 55 mph I almost got over 40 mpg. I saw similar ratios in my '02 Cherokee using its built in computer. A huge fraction of energy is consumed in accelerating up to speed and then it gets wasted as heat in the brakes when you stop. That is why city mileage is always much worse than highway mileage (since very few cars, even the hybrids and electrics, use waste-energy recovery for breaking). But trains operate on very gentle slopes (seldom over 1%) and the track routing is designed with as few, and as gentle, curves as possible. Then the train is operated at as near constant speed for its entire journey as possible. Furthermore, because they don't do stop and go (and because they are on dedicated lines when they do, as opposed to sharing the road with a bunch of other drivers), they can accelerate very slowly. That means that they can use engines that are way underpowered compared to what a car needs to accelerate away from a stoplight at even a moderate rate. That stacks the deck hugely in favor of the train for fuel efficiency.
To show how significant these effects are, a group of University of Michigan students (senior design project) built a car that had a 16 hp engine, got 80 mpg, and had very fast acceleration from a stop (I don't recall the numbers on that). They did it by having the engine drive a hydraulic pump and used hydraulic motors at the wheels. The car had a good size accumulator that was used to store fluid under pressure for quick starts off the line and also used for braking so that a large fraction of the recoverable energy was recovered when slowing down or stopping. This was sometime back in the '80s, I think.
But even the amazing efficiency of trains pales in comparison to ships. A large container ship can move 1 ton of cargo about 3000 miles on a gallon of fuel.
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