Japan bullet train
Uploader Comments (jeffus)
Top Comments
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dont call em japs.
the war is over call them japanese
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If only this type of transportation became available in the US. Roads would have less cars, price of traveling would drop, too bad we're too dumb for that.
All Comments (47)
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@TahreyUK Gosh, I don't even remember writing that comment.
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wow ... how long is that thing, seriously? Must be doing 60mph by the time the back end leaves view and it takes forever for that to happen...
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@jamessmedley82 you are a sad strange little man, and you have my pity
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@PatoStereo some sort of air stability thing or something?
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@RandomentalTV America is going to fall behind on technology..trust me
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@jdspds yeah but americans and japanese are different people.. americans like driving 4x4 and pick-ups japanese like riding 300km trains that get u there in a second rather than 9 hours and hunderds in fuel cost.
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@RandomentalTV Japan, stop slaughtering endangered whales !
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@jeffus AMERICA IS GOING OUT OF OIL, SO EATING IRAQ NOW, BECAUSE VERY ECONOMICAL CARS NEEDS FUEL :DDDDDDD
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what is that on the roof @ 0:21 ???
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As the train goes faster and faster you can see aliasing ie. the windows seem to
be traveling in the opposite direction of the train.
The term aliasing refers to the distortion that occurs when a continuous time signal has frequencies larger than half of the sampling rate. The process of aliasing describes the phenomenon in which components of the signal at high frequencies are mistaken for components at lower frequencies.
From India
ive been on that!!Its the Nozomi Shinkhansen u can really feel the force as a nother shnkansen passes u!AMAZING!
BuB45682 4 years ago
You are not kidding! They are very very impressive as they fly past the platform.
jeffus 4 years ago
Tell Me the speed of this BULLET
cairnssaravanan 4 years ago
From wikipedia:
Since the initial Tōkaidō Shinkansen opened in 1964 running at 210 km/h (130 mph), the network (2,459 km or 1,528 miles) has expanded to link most major cities on the islands of Honshū and Kyūshū with running speeds of up to 300 km/h (188 mph), in an earthquake and typhoon prone environment. Test run speeds have been 443 km/h (275 mph) for conventional rail in 1996, and up to a world record of 581 km/h (361 mph) for maglev trainsets, in 2003.
jeffus 4 years ago