I can smell trouble coming from Giorgi for the next few chapters. People like him never really learn their lesson or disappear in this manga
solving friction like that also means that you end up with some really dinged up parts after a while since they are still... well... experiencing friciton.That whole slope thing to give it speed is kinda convoluted for nothing.
The first trains were as fast as a person walking; they became the most amazing transportation devices not because they were fast but because people didn't have to walk themselves and without the weight limits animals have.
Now imagine being able to commute 600km in a single day or whatever, which this fictional train can do: the slow start is irrelevant.
Yeah even in Japan it took 90 years between the first train and the bullet train. But of course we need to skip the tech ladder, this is an isekai.That whole slope thing to give it speed is kinda convoluted for nothing.
The first trains were as fast as a person walking; they became the most amazing transportation devices not because they were fast but because people didn't have to walk themselves and without the weight limits animals have.
Now imagine being able to commute 600km in a single day or whatever, which this fictional train can do: the slow start is irrelevant.
The entire project desperately needs an engineer to fill in for Miyabi's knowledge gaps.That whole slope thing to give it speed is kinda convoluted for nothing.
The first trains were as fast as a person walking; they became the most amazing transportation devices not because they were fast but because people didn't have to walk themselves and without the weight limits animals have.
Now imagine being able to commute 600km in a single day or whatever, which this fictional train can do: the slow start is irrelevant.
I assume it's not to scale... but it's a train, so you can just toss it off its rails with catch points if you want help stopping it over a short distance.I actually like the slope system, but I think it needs some more track at the end for emergency breaking, so it doesn't hit a wall if things go badly.
I can think of a few counterweight methods that they can use to power the cable that pulls it up the slope, so I'm curious as to what they decided.
Reminder that Miyabi is an architect in a game world, not a real world engineer. Imagine someone who only makes aesthetic builds in minecraft, trying to build things IRL with only their existing knowledge base.That whole slope thing to give it speed is kinda convoluted for nothing.
The first trains were as fast as a person walking; they became the most amazing transportation devices not because they were fast but because people didn't have to walk themselves and without the weight limits animals have.
Now imagine being able to commute 600km in a single day or whatever, which this fictional train can do: the slow start is irrelevant.
sorry man, I have no clue why the roof fell down. In minecraft stuff just flies when you remove the building pillars.Imagine someone who only makes aesthetic builds in minecraft, trying to build things IRL with only their existing knowledge base.