At the desk sat Robert W. Lobenstein ? Loby to his friends ? with a radio in his hand and a look of excitement on his face that only someone with an engineering degree can have.
"Five . . . four . . . three . . . two . . . one," he called into his radio. "Full acceleration southbound!"
Despite the distant roar, Mr. Lobenstein, the general superintendent of power operations for the subway, was not launching a shuttle. He was launching a train ? one of the brand-new models starting to appear now on the L line ? along a 10,000-foot test track just outside the barn.
http://www.nytimes.com/2002/07/30/nyregion... Pentadyne Power Corporation (
www.pentadyne.com ), a world leader in flywheel
energy storage systems, announced that the Metropolitan Transit Authority of New
York (
www.mta.nyc.ny.us ) will use Pentadyne as the supplier of a 2.4 megawatt
energy recycling system that will be used to capture, store and reuse braking
energy of trains on a station of the Long Island Railroad.
The MTA oversees all of New York City`s world-renowned subways, commuter trains
and buses. It is North America`s largest transit authority, providing 2.6
billion passenger trips each year - the equivalent of about one in every three
users of mass transit in the United States and two-thirds of the nation's rail
riders.
The pilot project has major financial support from the New York Power Authority
(
www.nypa.gov ), which selected Pentadyne as the supplier.
The project will involve an array of sustainable, environmentally responsible
carbon-fiber flywheel systems that capture and store braking energy from slowing
trains, then reuse that energy for acceleration.
http://www.reuters.com/article/pressReleas...