very interesting info on arrow using MAGLEV

Arrow Dynamics to Team Up To Build High Tech Coaster

Clearfield, UT -- Arrow Dynamics of Clearfield, Utah is teaming up with NASA and industry partner PRT Systems Inc. of Park Forest, Ill. and a British university to research and test magnetic levitation or maglev.

The partnership is being formed to help further develop the technology that someday could be used to launch a spacecraft into orbit using magnets to float the vehicle along a track.

The partners are planning to test the state-of-the-art technology by constructing a 300-foot tall steel roller coaster at an undisclosed theme park in Japan.

The designers plan to use the maglev technology to replace the chain lift, which is used to pull the coaster trains up the lift hill. Instead of the traditional lift, they hope to use maglev to "float" the trains up the 300-foot tall hill.

Exact details about the coaster were not released, but it was reported that the coaster would have a top speed of nearly 100-mph. The new coaster is expected to be complete in year 2003-2005.

NASA hopes to one day use the Magnetic levitation technology to reduce the cost of going to space. The cost difference could be so dramatic that everyday people could leave the planet.

*** This post was edited by bryang on 4/9/2001. ***
this should be a roumor


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FEAR THE FOUR
Drachen fire what will happen to it?
yeah it should

sounds sweet though
no this is not a rumor. i found it at many sites and i will give them to you as i find them. maglev is the technology being used on the next generation trains where magnets propel the trains to speed up to 500 mph. The us is researching on this technology for high speed travel across the country. this is all true. can someone back me up on this
The maglev is very real. They are planning to build a prototype of the train version in either Pittsburgh or Baltimore. It really is a quite amazing technology and I have always thought that it would translate well to the amusement park industry as well.


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My name is Jason, and I'm addicted to coasters.
i found more info on it but more on the trains and how they were funded by Arrow Dynamics.

For Release: Sept. 25, 1998

June Malone
Media Relations Office
(256) 544-7061/0034
June.Malone@msfc.nasa.gov
http://www.msfc.nasa.gov/news

Release: 98-190


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Levitated Locomotion to Space

"THIS is a thrilling ride," announces a pre-recorded, bass voice over the clank of your seatbelt buckle. You're strapped in for the ride of your life.
You patiently waited and watched as others experienced the adventure. Your eyeglasses and other loose articles tucked away, now it's your turn.

But this is no ordinary roller coaster ride and you're not at an amusement park.

You're perched on an airport runway, ready for take-off on your first trip to space.

Tickets could go on sale just after the turn of the century.

NASA's Advanced Space Transportation Program at the Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala., is developing magnetic levitation technologies that could reduce the cost of going to space so dramatically that everyday people could leave the planet.

NASA and industry partner PRT Systems Inc. of Park Forest, Ill., are teaming with an amusement ride manufacturer and a British university for research into magnetic levitation - or maglev - that could help launch spacecraft into orbit using magnets to float a vehicle along a track.

"Magnetic levitation is a promising technology for future space transportation as we build the highway to space," said Garry Lyles, manager of the Advanced Space Transportation Program. "The most expensive part of any mission to low-Earth orbit is the first few seconds - getting off the ground. Maglev is a low-cost alternative for space transportation because it leaves the first-stage propulsion system on the ground."

Just as high-strength magnets lift and propel high-speed trains and roller coasters a couple of inches above a guideway, a maglev launch-assist system would electromagnetically drive a space vehicle down a track. The carrier could be similar to a flatbed railcar. The magnetically levitated vehicle would catapult from the ground at 600 mph and then shift to a rocket engine to reach orbit.

"A maglev system is virtually maintenance-free because it has no moving parts and there's no contact," said Lyles. "It could help launch a spacecraft from a typical airport runway to low-Earth orbit every 90 minutes." A single maglev system is projected to work for 30 years.

Cutting-edge technology for maglev emerged through successful proof-of-concept experiments at the University of Sussex in Brighton, England. In a laboratory there, a 2-foot-long sled is propelled at 120 mph along a 20-foot electromagnetic track.

The track is actually an advanced linear induction motor that provides thrust, lift and the added advantage of guidance of the launch vehicle. Figuratively a rotary motor split in half and rolled out flat, a linear induction motor produces thrust in a straight line instead of by turning a shaft or gears. Motors for the experiment were developed by PRT and funded by Arrow Dynamics Inc. of Clearfield, Utah, an amusement ride manufacturer. ***********

As part of a larger scale experiment in 1999, two tracks measuring 50 and 400 feet are planned in Huntsville. Design plans are scheduled to be finalized within two years for a 5,000-foot track capable of launching a 40,000-pound payload at a test site.

Two other approaches to maglev for space launch are being developed for NASA by Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory of San Francisco and Foster-Miller Inc. of Waltham, Mass. The Livermore team has developed a system that uses permanent magnets and a novel linear motor that runs without superconductors or complex feedback circuits. The Foster-Miller system uses a linear motor with superconducting magnets on the vehicle.

As early as 2007, a maglev launch assist system could be used to launch very small communications satellites for thousands of dollars per pound. Within 20 years, this technology could be used to help launch much larger payloads to orbit for only hundreds of dollars per pound - a welcome contrast to today's launch costs of $10,000 per pound. When the price comes down, more people go up. And that's when the tickets go on sale for a thrilling ride to leave the planet.


more info
Maglev Coasters Coming
PRT Maglev Systems and Arrow Dynamics have teamed up to develop a supercoaster higher than 300 feet tall that will reach speeds greater than 100 mph. They have a pending contract to build their first such roller coaster at a site outside of the United States, reportedly in Japan, near Osaka. (4/19/99)

http://themeparks.about.com/travel/themeparks/library/weekly/blnews994.htm
These releases are 2-3 years old with nothing having happened since. These seem to be the kind of releases intended to stir up interest in R&D projects. While we might some day see a maglev coaster, I wouldn't hold my breath. The tight turns and high lateral forces of coasters are likely to be especially challenging for maglev technology.
they were investing in maglev 2 years ago and it is probably just taking longer than they thought especially with the new concepts they are coming out with. look at the new project at at code named sw5, it take 4 extra years from when they expected it out. i heard that they were perfecting it for 15 years.
The MagLev system is real. There is already a train over in Europe or China or somewhere foreign to us State's folk, and it looks like a great system. The coaster part of this though, is most likley untrue. It'd be better off to have this topic in the rumors section.

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I pledge defiance to the flag of the United States of America, and to the Republicans, which I can't stand, one nation, under smog, indespicable, with liberty for just us, not all.
just to let everyone know i didnt write the two long ones with all of the info so it isnt something i just made up. and the one thing that really makes me believe it is that i have found it on so many other sites that if someone "just made it up" than why sould so many sites have in-depth reports on it?
and their isnt a rumor section here is there?
Marc: You mentioned to me previously that Disneyland's ill-fated Rocket Rods attraction was under serious consideration for TDL's Tomorrowland.
I'd love to hear more about that.

Eddie: It was under consideration as an addition to their Tomorrowland and we had produced a faster, greatly enhanced and restyled version of the ride
called "MagRacers." This was a dual racing design with a sci-fi "powered by magnetic power" angle..They wanted it until "Rocket Rods" began to unravel
and we moved on to other options.
here is some info on maglev that was gonna be at d-land. they were gonna supe up the rocket rods and they were gonna call it magracers(maglev)
I remember at Coastermania 99 that Ron Toomer said he knew of a coaster that was being developed for somwhere other than the USA that would be over 300 feet tall. Shortly after that Arrow announced that they were building a 300 foot maglev coaster. I haven't heard anything else about it till now. It's sure taking a LONG time to design and build this thing.

I dismissed it. I remember reading in a Ron Toomer interview from the early 90s that he said that he had an orders for a couple more hypers on his desk, including a 275 foot one. They never built any more, so I dismissed the maglev coaster along with other coasters they said they would build. I'm interested to see what will happen with it.
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- Peabody

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