He's a swindler. Also check the capacity on his tech. They're aiming for 16 passengers every 30 seconds. Toronto subway does 2000 passengers every 2 minutes, or 500 every 30 seconds.
Harsh, and requires quantification.
While I criticize the low capacity of Elon's flawed transit plans -- and root for the neat Boring Tech to build proper subway/LRT tunnels faster and cheaper instead -- I need to point out that this is Elon's plan to make 16 passengers every 30 second occur in parallel.
First, cue the Version 1 Silly Publicity Concept. (Not going to bappen)
Unrealistic Draft Version 1
The "publicity" images of lifts (single vehicles appearing out of sidewalks) used in Verge
image is not what is planned for Chicago.
Reality is different. See concept image slightly closer to reality.
Version 2 Slightly Realistic Early Draft Concept
More Realistic Draft Version 2
More realistic plans will rapidly iterate. Version 3, 4, 5....
Maybe it'll even be 24 or 32 per vehicle. Maybe it'll be more like a miniaturized Montreal-style tires-in-guideway (cordlessly) except there is no couplers because it is platooning. Maybe it'll switch to Tesla-on-steel-rails system. Speeds may be slower than hoped. It'll evolve. But arguably the Version 2 image above is a much more realistic than those silly sidewalk lift publicity images.
The tunnel headways would probably be tighter than 30 seconds (except between platoons), using autopilot platooning technology, creating long virtual "trains" via platooning.
And no highway dividers to worry about to trigger an AutoPilot disaster in national news - the system will be more deterministic like an automated metro, except it could be just a glorified self-propelled-train-coach that don't need couplers because it's a platooning system.
I do not think it will be a financial success without a subsidy though.
Swindle = possibly only to investors IMHO.
It may reach roughly LRT throughput in PPPHPD (Peak People Per Hour Per Direction), but not subway throughput PPPHPD.
But might be a subsidized public transit success after a UPX-style boondoggle-and-repricing/takeover turnaround.
Texhnologically, if he pulls it off successfully, it peovides a technically-legitimate new transit option. Maybe squarish peg into a roundish hole -- initially -- but manages to become LRT train throughput despite 16 per vehicle.
Their engineers are smart.
Do not underestimate Musk, even if there almost certainly will be major cost overrun, and it almost certainly won't be profitable either - but may actually end up being feasible after proper tweakin by his smart engineers.
Major cost cutting:
- Near zero infrastructure in tunnels
- No high voltage electric wiring needed in tunnels (just enough for LED emergency lights etc)
- Simpler emergency systems in vehicles
- Faster tunnelling
- Narrow tunnels
- Mass manufacture of cheaper, smaller battery electric vehicles under Tesla experience
- Only two mega stations needed (as an airport express)
A lot of source code is already written, as the "autopilot" needs of this system is much simpler to bring to Level 5 automation leagues (like existing driverless metros) in a perfectly controlled private "Tesla-coach-only" guideway designed corridor with no other human driver or unexpected obstructions.
It won't cut government red tape faster (except under recognizance, like Chicago) and will likely need eventual tax subsidy but may succeed competitively to existing transit systems.
Risks could be system shutdown by lithium battery fires, escape plan, difficulty engineering easy emergency plan, safety risks of slimmed down safety plan for large number of vehicles, unexpected cost overruns,
Denver International Airport Baggage System style IT complexity (its basically the same kind of pod-transport disaster), and several others.
But then again,
Musk ran 27 rocket engines simultaneously perfectly (SpaceX Falcon Heavy) where 30-engine Russia N1's kept exploding under their secret moon program that attempted to beat USA to moon in the late 1960s. And now....won his first military Falcon Heavy launch contract just today (June 21, 2018).
Yes, shame on Musk for spouting anti-transit stuff. Kudos to Brent Toderian for shaming Elon last year with the #GreatThingsThatHappenedOnTransit campaign.
But let's look at the proper truths of the Chicago plan.
It's likely somewhere in between.
On technical achievements his companies (eventually) do.
As eccentric as Musk sheninigians are, with the Boring Flamethrowers and ilk.... His companies do amazing things, and he does (eventually) learn through audacious iteration.
His company's engineering may polish this 16-car turd to a jawdrop high capacity LRT throughput, when I study the plan closer. 50-50 technical success IMHO.
I am a computer programmer with engineering skills so this is my honest assessment.
Reading history textbooks of behind-the-scenes sheninigians -- even Thomas Edison also took advantage of lots of "swindle-seeming" promises (it's amazing how similar the blathering is) until successfully achieved.
History is littered with outlandish promises combined with huge risk taking and large adjustments to fit reality of breakthroughs that may be different from initial concept.
As a result, Elon Musk is no more "swindler" than Thomas Edison or Steve Jobs, if one persists in using that word, as much as one hates or likes these well known figures.
Ironically, of Tesla namesake original etmylogy, Nikola Tesla and his massive Wardenclyffe failure over a century ago - Who back in the olden days, can forget that massive "swindle" when it sensationalized the international news back then? But, Nikola Tesla still brought us AC electricity and long distance electricity transmission.
The design is iterating fast -- the Chicago system is surprisingly "mass" transit (even if not subway league, but LRT league), 16 persons per vehicle is deceiving. It mathematically works out if platooning surges is done.
It will lose money, but the engineering appears to manage to move as many people as a large LRT train.
It will not replace the need for LRTs and subway (right tool for the right job). But it may find a useful place.
However.
Never underestimate Elon Musk.