Sunday, March 07, 2010

Shinkansen!



This is all the video I could grab before it was time for me to concentrate on hopping on to the train. Taking the commuter train from Narita to Urawa was an amazing experience. I was in awe of all the people jumping on and off the trains with such confidence....They would literally walk out the left doors of one train and directly on to the doors of another train and whisk away. Amazing speed and numbers....and I was the only foreign face I saw until we walked into Ryu and Kim's apartment.

Today was my first Shinkansen experience.....described in the I'm Home post....but here's a bit more of the "nuts and bolts" from wikipedia.

The Shinkansen (新幹線, "New Main Line"?) also known as "the bullet train" is a network of high-speed railway lines in Japan operated by four Japan Railways Group companies. Starting with the 210 km/h (130 mph) Tōkaidō Shinkansen in 1964, the now 2,459 km (1,528 mi) long network has expanded to link most major cities on the islands of Honshū and Kyūshū at speeds up to 300 km/h (186 mph). Test runs have reached 443 km/h (275 mph) for conventional rail in 1996, and up to a world record 581 km/h (361 mph) for maglev trainsets in 2003.

Shinkansen literally means "New Trunk Line", referring to the tracks, but the name is widely used inside and outside Japan to refer to the trains as well as the system as a whole. The name "Superexpress" (超特急, chō-tokkyū?), initially used for Hikari trains, was retired in 1972 but is still used in English-language announcements and signage.

The Tōkaidō Shinkansen is the world's busiest high-speed rail line. Carrying 151 million passengers a year (March 2008),[1] it has transported more passengers (over 6 billion)[2] than any other high speed line in the world.[3] Between Tokyo and Osaka, the two largest metropolises in Japan, up to ten trains per hour with 16 cars each (1,300 seats capacity) run in each direction with a minimum of 3 minutes between trains. Though largely a long-distance transport system, the Shinkansen also serves commuters who travel to work in metropolitan areas from outlying cities.
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2 comments:

Renee said...

Korea was very much the same way. Once you got more than a few blocks away from post, you didn't see any foreigners. We would go to the zoo or the amusement park and be the only non-Asians we'd see all day.

Cynthia said...

FUN!. We took the fast train in Europe, but it didn't really seem all that fast and I doubt it was as fast as the bullet.