On Bahn's website at 
http://www.bahn.com/i/view/DEU/en/trains/overview/ecic.shtml, which is in 
English, the speed of the trains described is shown as 200 km/h.

John F-L
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Martin Vlietstra 
  To: U.S. Metric Association 
  Sent: Saturday, January 01, 2011 10:42 AM
  Subject: [USMA:49374] RE: High speed rail error


  I recently sent an e-mail to the Bundesbahn asking why they used the term 
"kph" rather than "km/h" on their English-language website.  It appears that 
they are pandering to the lowest level of British intelligence.

   


------------------------------------------------------------------------------

  From: owner-u...@colostate.edu [mailto:owner-u...@colostate.edu] On Behalf Of 
Pat Naughtin
  Sent: 01 January 2011 00:36
  To: U.S. Metric Association
  Cc: USMA Metric Association
  Subject: [USMA:49368] High speed rail error

   

  Dear Carleton,

   

  I think you will be interested in this train story at 
http://www.cahsrblog.com/2010/12/hsr-emissions-paper-was-wrong/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=hsr-emissions-paper-was-wrong
 where they say:

   

  Berkeley's numbers are undone by a simple unit conversion error committed by 
a CHSRA consultant. Conversions between metric and imperial units are prone to 
errors and misunderstandings, most famously in the case of NASA's $300 million 
Mars Climate Orbiter mission, which was inadvertently crashed into Mars because 
of an overlooked conversion between pounds and Newtons. In the case of the 
high-speed rail study, the CHSRA consultant's unit conversion error leads to an 
overestimate of HSR energy consumption by a factor of nearly four-not just in 
the Berkeley study, but also in the CHSRA's program level environmental reports.

  The energy consumption figure cited in the Berkeley study and its 
supplementary data is 170 kilowatt-hours per vehicle kilometer traveled, or 
kWh/VKT, a measure of how much energy a high-speed train consumes on average 
when traveling one kilometer. This number is correctly converted by Berkeley 
from a figure of 924,384 BTU/VMT referenced in the energy chapter of the 2008 
CHSRA program-level EIR. That chapter in turn references a peer-review study 
performed for CHSRA by the German firm DE-Consult in 2000, which evaluated the 
energy consumption of a hypothetical 16-car trainset with a seating capacity of 
1200 and a design speed of 385 km/h (240 mph) and an operating speed of 350 
km/h (220 mph), essentially a souped-up German ICE3. The DE-Consult study 
(unavailable online) contains detailed performance simulations for the proposed 
California system that give the average energy consumption of such a train as 
74.2 kWh/VMT, or 46 kWh/VKT (see copy of Annex 4-11). And therein lies the 
error: CHSRA's consultant botched the conversion from kilowatt-hours to British 
Thermal Units, feeding Berkeley a figure of 170 kWh/VKT instead of 46 kWh/VKT.

  I wonder why they were converting from British Thermal Units (no temperature 
specified) to kilowatt hours instead of (say) megajoules per kilometre (MJ/km). 
Clearly none of the consultant engineers has any sort of firm grasp on 
metrology -- VKT for vehicle kilometre travelled doesn't impress me as coming 
from a knowledgeable person who knows his SI from his toothbrush.

   

  Cheers,

   

  Pat Naughtin LCAMS

  Author of the ebook, Metrication Leaders Guide, see 
http://metricationmatters.com/MetricationLeadersGuideInfo.html

  Hear Pat speak at: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_lshRAPvPZY 

  PO Box 305 Belmont 3216,

  Geelong, Australia

  Phone: 61 3 5241 2008

   

  Metric system consultant, writer, and speaker, Pat Naughtin, has helped 
thousands of people and hundreds of companies upgrade to the modern metric 
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