This is definitely not something I have ever heard about before. How about a 100 MPH electric train in 1893. And what's interesting, it sounds like they actually started implementing this project by grading 24 miles of the proposed real estate. Logically, this fact is supposed to mean that they did have the solution to design the above locomotive.
- Long Distance Electric Locomotive
- Download PDF + 1 - a lot of fun stuff in there
- The first recorded 100 MPH train speed is currently attributed to the year 1934.
1893
Chicago & St. Louis Electric Railroad brochure
Brochure with maps advertising the work "commenced on October 6th 1892, being rapidly pushed in both directions" for an all electric railroad line running from Chicago to St. Louis. The aerodynamics of this train showed up in our contemporary railroad industry exactly when?
- If you ever run into a readable copy of the below brochure (Source ), please share a link.
- And I guess it makes the date 1892.
I doubt we will ever find out what locomotive was supposed to be used with this 1892 bullet train, but below is a picture of some 1879 one.
KD: Well, my position on stuff like this has not changed. I think there was some inherited technology we were either incapable of harnessing, or outright not allowed to use.
- Chicago historians appear to be thinking that the abovementioned train pertains to 1910.
- I liked the following comparison they presented:
- The highpoint to date of the $1.5 billion Chicago-to-St. Louis corridor high-speed rail project occurred on Thanksgiving Day 2012, when Amtrak Lincoln Service trains began operating up to 110 mph over a 15-mile stretch between Dwight and Pontiac, Ill.
Original article:1893: 100 MPH High Speed Electric Train
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