Rollout coming soon... stay tuned!

Unsere Prototypen

Die Entwicklung eines ultraschnellen bodengebundenen Transportsystems erfordert die Bewältigung zahlreicher Herausforderungen in verschiedenen technischen Bereichen. Prototypen sind der Schlüssel zur Validierung unserer Lösungen und zur Verbesserung unseres Designs.

Demonstrator in Echtgröße

Nach einer gründlichen Systemanalyse entwerfen wir derzeit einen kompletten Hyperloop-Demonstrator in Originalgröße, der sowohl eine 24 Meter lange Röhre als auch eine Passagierkapsel in Menschengröße umfasst. Er wird uns helfen, unser vorgeschlagenes Konzept unter Beweis zu stellen, unsere Konzeptentscheidungen zu validieren und Daten zur weiteren Verbesserung des Systems zu sammeln.

Es ist der logische nächste Schritt auf unserem Weg zur Entwicklung eines passagierfähigen Hyperloop-Systems.

WETTBEWERB
FULL-SCALE
POD IV
POD III
POD II
POD I

Our Competition Pods

SpaceX Hyperloop Pod Competition

To encourage students to contribute to the development of the Hyperloop system proposed by Elon Musk in 2013, in 2015 the aerospace company SpaceX initiated the international “SpaceX Hyperloop Pod Competition”.

After having set up a 1.2 km long vacuum tube next to their headquarters in Hawthorne, California, SpaceX held four editions of the competition, the last one in July 2019.

The goal of the competition has been to design and build the fastest Hyperloop pod prototype in the race. Over the years, TUM Hyperloop (previously known as WARR Hyperloop) has won all competitons and currently holds the world record with an impressive top-speed of 482 km/h.

IV.

Pod Four

Our best prototype yet. 

By optimizing every subsystem and pushing every component of the pod to its limits, the team was able to take the performance to impressive new heights.

 
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For the final SpaceX Hyperloop Pod Competition in July 2019 the team has pushed every aspect of the pod to its extremes. 

New custom battery cells with impressive power-density, new improved power electronics for even higher power, a custom braking system with higher pressures and an all-titanium design as well as an even lighter although stronger reinforced carbon fiber chassis contributed to raising the performance of the pod to new levels. This resulted in a new speed record in the race: in the final run of the July 2019 competition the pod reached a peak speed of outstanding 482 km/h.

III.

Pod Three

Incredible power in an even smaller package. 

Building upon the design of the previous pod but making decisive changes in all subsystems, the team managed to increase the power-to-weight ratio by a factor of more than five.

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Following the success at the second competition, the team was encouraged to double down on its high-speed design.

Switching to distributed propulsion with eight lightweight but high-power ironless motors, optimizing each layer of the carbon fiber chassis as well as designing a custom pneumatic braking system contributed to an incredible five-fold improvement of the power-to-weight ratio. At the competition in July 2018 this pod accelerated to remarkable 467 km/h, shattering the previous speed record and earning compliments from the SpaceX jury for the impressive improvements.

II.

Pod Two

Smaller, lighter and much, much faster. 

With a mass of only 85kg and the first onboard propulsion system, providing 0.9 g of acceleration, the radical new design of the second prototype from TUM influenced all future pods in the competition.

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With only six months to design, build and test the prototype for the second competition, the team decided to work on a radically new concept, a lightweight and high-performance pod. 

A powerful electric motor was added for propulsion, carbon fiber was used for the chassis and all components were designed with lightweight in mind. The result was the fastest vehicle in the race by far: after passing again all stages of the competition, the second pod from TUM reached an impressive speed of 324 km/h, setting a new record in the race.

I.

Pod One

The very first pod prototype from the Munich team, built with scalability in mind. 

Its unique feature: a built-in compressor inspired by Elon Musk’s white paper to comply with the competition’s design criteria.

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Technical Highlights

Shortly after the announcement of the competition in 2015, a group of students at TUM started working on a one-of-a-kind Hyperloop prototype.

With a scalable design, including a compressor at the front, a modular aluminium chassis and a redundant braking system, the team from Munich impressed the SpaceX jury, managing to pass all stages and qualify for a test run on the day of the competition in January 2017. With a flawless execution and a top speed of 94 km/h, Pod I delivered the first win for the Munich team at the event.

 

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