
A competition to find the best Hyperloop pod is being held this weekend at Elon Musk’s SpaceX headquarters in Hawthorne, California.
Students and engineers involved in building and testing Hyperloop pods will descend on the Hyperloop test track in California this weekend.
The competition scheduled for January 27-29, 2017 will see twenty-six teams from four continents test the viability of their human-scale designed pods.

BYPASS THE CENSORS
Sign up to get unfiltered news delivered straight to your inbox.
You can unsubscribe any time. By subscribing you agree to our Terms of Use
A second competition is scheduled for summer 2017 that will be based purely on achieving maximum speed and will be open to newcomers.
RT.com reports:
The Hyperloop concept, proposed back in 2013, aims to create a high-speed vacuum-sealed rail system capable of transporting passengers between San Francisco and Los Angeles in 30 minutes. The proposal is ambitious to say the least, given that the journey currently takes approximately 8 hours by train or 1 hour and 15 minutes by plane.
Hyperloop pod race happening this weekend at SpaceX HQ (near LAX). We built a ~mile long vacuum tube on our campus big enough to fit people.
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) 27 January 2017
“SpaceX is running an open competition, geared towards university students and independent engineering teams, to design and build the best Hyperloop pod,” SpaceX said on their official competition page.
Teams arrive today for Testing Week before first-ever Hyperloop Competition at @SpaceX HQ on Jan. 27-29 → https://t.co/MHrFCAOGoH #breakapod pic.twitter.com/lCrFFDti0a
— Hyperloop (@Hyperloop) 22 January 2017
While the roughly 1-mile-long test track was constructed by SpaceX beside their Hawthorne headquarters, the company itself has no direct involvement in the development of the Hyperloop, other than encouraging and supporting the development of a viable prototype.
When the competition was initially announced, Space X received 125 entries, but their engineers whittled it down to just 30 after extensive testing. Only 26 teams will actually compete this weekend, as several have been forced to drop out or will be attending the event but not competing.
This weekend’s test is being seen as the precursor to the main speed test event scheduled for this summer. This second competition will also be open to students and independent firms, given that the data collected from this weekend’s competition “will continue to be open-sourced,” according to SpaceX.
The competition’s front runners include teams traveling to California from Massachusetts and Munich, Germany.
Testing Week continues! Team pods undergo mechanical, navigation, vacuum and other tests before hitting the track. #breakapod pic.twitter.com/xH2bDsKbWC
— Hyperloop (@Hyperloop) 26 January 2017
The team from MIT have already drawn a lot of attention, winning the best overall design award in the previous Hyperloop competition held in 2016. They claim their pod can reach a top speed of roughly 224 mph (360 kph).
The @MITHyperloop team prepares for the next round of the SpaceX #Hyperloop Pod competition. https://t.co/BM29N8Wv4s pic.twitter.com/fV8v7JCJr5
— MIT (@MIT) 17 May 2016
The Badgerloop team from the University of Wisconsin-Madison won a Pod Technical Excellence Award previously, with their 15-foot (4.5m) design. “Our pod will be fully levitating and won’t be touching any part of the tube,” BadgerLoop co-president Brett Sjostrom told the University. The team estimates a top speed of roughly 200mph.
The WARR Hyperloop team from The Technical University of Munich, Germany is one of two European teams competing this weekend and boasts a theoretical top speed of 217mph (350kph).
Edmondo Burr
CEO
Assistant Editor
Latest posts by Edmondo Burr (see all)
- Police Arrest Suspect In Supermarket Baby Food Poisoning - October 1, 2017
- Seoul Secures Data From Electromagnetic Interference By N Korea - September 30, 2017
- The ‘World’s First Internet War’ Has Begun: Julian Assange - September 30, 2017