Skip to main content

Siemens is at it again with a hybrid train capable of 125 mph

Siemens is no stranger to hybrid-transportation technology, and has announced its intention to create a hybrid electric plane long before NASA. However, the engineering firm is also working on more earthbound transportation in the form of a passenger train — and a fast one at that.

In a privately funded venture, Siemens will build hybrid diesel electric trains for Brightline, according to Business Insider. Initial plans for the train will connect Miami, Fort Lauderdale, and West Palm Beach. Brightline indicates that the train will cut travel between downtown Miami and Fort Lauderdale to 30 minutes, allowing commuters and tourists a quicker, greener option to travel that route.

Recommended Videos

Florida’s east coast will be a starter market for the high-speed hybrid train, but Siemens indicates that it is also manufacturing 69 more diesel-electric trains for California, Illinois, Maryland, Michigan, Missouri, and Washington Departments of Transportation. Siemens manufactures the trains at its 600,000 square foot factory in Sacramento, California, and then transports the trains to the service markets.

Please enable Javascript to view this content

Rail service from Miami to West Palm Beach is scheduled to begin in mid-2017, though no implementation time frame was immediately available for the markets outside of Florida.

In the mean time, Florida is preparing the infrastructure necessary to incorporate this game-changer and to extend its reach. Fort Lauderdale began construction on its 60,000 square foot Brightline station in May. Outside of Fort Lauderdale, rail construction is expected to be complete by the end of 2017, and will add Orlando to the list of Florida rail destinations.

While the 125 mph Brightline is not as fast as some found overseas, it is much faster than Amtrack’s 80 mph trains, and provides a quicker alternative for travel between the popular destinations on Florida’s east coast.

A 4,000 horsepower Cummins diesel-electric engine powers the Brightline train, and a 42,000-pound 16-cylinder electric generator keeps electricity flowing. 42 miles of cable runs throughout the train to meet train and passenger electrical demands. The hybrid design allows the train to meet Federal Railroad Administration Tier IV clean air standards.

Dave Palmer
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Dave’s technology geek-fest began with the classic Commodore 64 computer, which started a lifelong passion for all things…
Faraday Future could unveil lowest-priced EV yet at CES 2025
Faraday Future FF 91

Given existing tariffs and what’s in store from the Trump administration, you’d be forgiven for thinking the global race toward lower electric vehicle (EV) prices will not reach U.S. shores in 2025.

After all, Chinese manufacturers, who sell the least expensive EVs globally, have shelved plans to enter the U.S. market after 100% tariffs were imposed on China-made EVs in September.

Read more
What to expect at CES 2025: drone-launching vans, mondo TVs, AI everywhere
CES 2018 Show Floor

With 2024 behind us, all eyes in tech turn to Las Vegas, where tech monoliths and scrappy startups alike are suiting up to give us a glimpse of the future. What tech trends will set the world afire in 2025? While we won’t know all the details until we hit the carpets of the Las Vegas Convention Center, our team of reporters and editors have had an ear to the ground for months. And we have a pretty good idea what’s headed your way.

Here’s a sneak peek at all the gizmos, vehicles, technologies, and spectacles we expect to light up Las Vegas next week.
Computing

Read more
These unique smart glasses skirt hype and solve a real medical problem
Front view of the SolidddVision smartglasses.

Smart glasses are increasingly being pushed as the future of personal computing. But so far, an overwhelming majority have focused on aspects like social media sharing, pulling up AI agents, or media consumption. Soliddd wants to push smart glasses into a challenging niche of medical science.

At CES 2025, the New York City-based company introduced SolidddVision smart glasses. Soliddd claims these are “the first true vision correction for people living with vision loss due to macular degeneration.” Notably, these glasses won’t require any FDA clearance and will enter the market later this year.

Read more