Virgin Hyperloop wants to get you excited about riding its ultra-fast pods — but there’s a long way to go


Hyperloop is dubbed the first new mode of transport in over 100 years, and if all things go to plan, companies like Virgin Hyperloop will propel people through the air in pods moving through vacuum tubes.

This week Virgin Hyperloop released a new explainer video on Twitter. While the company sounds excited to get you onboard its ultra-fast trains, you’re in for a long wait before you can strap in for your first ride. Here’s why.

According to Virgin Hyperloop, it starts with a “near-vacuum environment inside a tube” that facilitates high speeds and low power consumption by reducing aerodynamic drag.

People and goods will travel in pods that use “proprietary magnetic levitation and propulsion” to lift and guide pods on a track, and allow several pods to depart per minute across different routes.

The company asserts:
After building and testing the world’s first hyperloop system, we are now focused on our commercial product. The key to our product is guided by a design that is elegant through its simplicity, future-proof due to its modularity, and guided by principles of this century, not the last.

Future pods will seat up to 28 passengers at speeds of over 1000 km/h — 10 times faster than traditional rail. By comparison, a maglev bullet train launched in China in July only reached 600km/hr. In terms of routes, their focus is Dubai, India (between Mumbai and Pune), and in the US, North Carolina, and Texas. The company claims to have carried out over 500 tests in Las Vegas.