B2 o wait in morrow, 1 working ntcd 20() T to keep a valid I.D. card l gradual- Johnson 6 p.m. ai Agenci gineering I Student all, Har- Center, ary, Sbisa Kleberg national Battalion/Page 7 March 31, 1982 \Iaglev travels at 312 mph Japanese build flying train United Press International MIYAZAKI, japan — The ipanese have this crazy idea trains should fly like air- ines, and their space-age en- meers have built one that does at 312 miles per hour. But now there’s much head- ntchingat the Japan National always over what to do with teir brainchild. The two maglevs — magne- ally levitated linear motor repelled trains — have success- illvcompleted two stages of de- tlopment at this southern ipan test facility on the island fKyushu. Plans now call for the uilding and testing of three thicles later this year. The maglevs sail through the ir at a fixed height of about >ur inches above the magne- led roadbed, and would make 311-mile run between r okvo and Osaka in about an “Our aim is to take people out of airplanes and put them back on trains,” a JNR representative said. JNR did a pretty good trans plant job a few years ago when they introduced the 130 mph When the 10-ton vehicle accelerates to a speed of 100 mph, the wheels re tract and the train skims through the air, levi tated by the repulsion force of the two mag nets — those on the road bed and those aboard the train. shinkansen (bullet trains) that now hustle thousands of passen gers between Tokyo and Japan’s major southern cities often fas ter than planes. “But the shinkansen are be coming too congested and too slow,” the representative com plained. “That’s why we are de veloping the maglevs.” To the pampered Japanese train riders, the other attractive features of the maglevs are that they are more quiet, more com fortable and consume less ener gy than the present rail system — 80 percent of which is electri fied. “The maglevs would only use about half the electricity needed to run the shinkansen at speeds of about 156 mph,” the repre sentative said. “But at speeds of about 312 mph, twice the amount of energy would be needed.” The far-sighted engineers at this Kyushu testing facility esti mate it will take another eight to 10 years to put the maglevs into service on the major trunk routes. Eventually, they predict unmanned maglev freight trains will run during the night, giving Japan the world’s fastest freight service. Manned passenger trains will use the facilities dur ing the day. “Only two people are needed to operate maglevs,” the repre sentative said, “one at either end of the line. But people prefer humans at the controls of their trains and planes, so we would man the passenger-carrying maglevs.” The revolutionary concept of propelling vehicles through the air with magnets uses the same basic principles as the electric motor, except the magnetic energy in motors rotates a shaft in a circular motion. With mag levs the magnetic energy pulls and pushes the vehicles in a straight line forward or back ward. The maglevs begin their flight on wheels. When the 10- ton vehicle accelerates to a speed of 100 mph, the wheels retract and the train skims through the air, levitated by the repulsion force of the two magnets — those on the road bed and those aboard the train. Similar magne tized coils along the sides of the guideway always keep the vehi cle on dead center. The fate of the maglevs now' passes from the physicists to the politicians. The physicists and engineers have proved the effi ciency and practicality of the maglevs. But the construction costs are enormous. “Although the costs of build ing a guideway are much higher than a shinkansen, the mainte nance costs are much less,” the JNR representative argued. Kidney windfall results in three rush transplants United Press International DALLAS — The head of a team of surgeons who per formed kidney transplants on three patients within a 24- hour period says the rush job was necessitated by the sud den availability of the kidneys. The three patients, Char ley Sides, Rickey Phillips and William Butler, were in fair condition over the weekend, a Methodist Hospital represen tative said. The men were being kept alive on dialysis machines when the organs became available, lead surgeon Dr. Richard Dickerman said. “It’s really unusual that something like this hap pened,” he said. “Patients who need a transplant will wait months or years for an organ to become available.” Dickerman and his team performed the three opera tions in succession. One kid ney was flown in from Atlanta and the other two were don ated by the family of a Texas man. “To have three kidneys be come available on the same day for three of my patients is something I’ll remember a long time,” Dickerman said. Kidneys usually are don ated by living relatives with a matching tissue type willing to give up one of two healthy organs. 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