What's new

China HSR News And Information: Original Translation

On the Chinese New Year
W020170203554965246947.jpg

W020170203554965183387.jpg


Many toddlers took bullet train back home with parents for the very first time
W020170203554965002857.jpg


The priority is the safety and well-being of children on the bullet trains
W020170203554965051001.jpg


Helping staff in the dining car
l
W020170203554964944704.jpg


Helping cleaner
W020170203554964899065.jpg
 
.
This clip shows testing of high speed train technology in the laboratory of the Institute of Mechanics at the Chinese Academy of Sciences in Beijing. The experimental platform is 274 meters long, the world’s largest platform of its kind to conduct tests and experiments on aerodynamics of high speed trains traveling at 500 kilometers per hour. Check the video to experience a train being tested at 250 km per hour along the experiment platform. How fast can China’s high speed train go?

 
.
This clip shows testing of high speed train technology in the laboratory of the Institute of Mechanics at the Chinese Academy of Sciences in Beijing. The experimental platform is 274 meters long, the world’s largest platform of its kind to conduct tests and experiments on aerodynamics of high speed trains traveling at 500 kilometers per hour. Check the video to experience a train being tested at 250 km per hour along the experiment platform. How fast can China’s high speed train go?

Awesome!
 
.
Magnificent view of high-speed trains
2017-02-07 13:10 Ecns.cn Editor:Yao Lan

HSR-in-Chongqing_(1)_6Feb2017.jpg

Lines of high-speed trains are parked on tracks awaiting checks in Southwest China’s Chongqing Municipality, Feb. 6, 2017. All fast trains were required to undergo maintenance after 2am during the Spring Festival travel rush. (Photo/CFP)

HSR-in-Chongqing_(2)_6Feb2017.jpg

Lines of high-speed trains are parked on tracks awaiting checks in Southwest China’s Chongqing Municipality, Feb. 6, 2017. All fast trains were required to undergo maintenance after 2am during the Spring Festival travel rush. (Photo/CFP)

HSR-in-Chongqing_(3)_6Feb2017.jpg

Lines of high-speed trains are parked on tracks awaiting checks in Southwest China’s Chongqing Municipality, Feb. 6, 2017. All fast trains were required to undergo maintenance after 2am during the Spring Festival travel rush. (Photo/CFP)
 
.
Magnificent view of high-speed trains
2017-02-07 13:10 Ecns.cn Editor:Yao Lan

View attachment 375397
Lines of high-speed trains are parked on tracks awaiting checks in Southwest China’s Chongqing Municipality, Feb. 6, 2017. All fast trains were required to undergo maintenance after 2am during the Spring Festival travel rush. (Photo/CFP)

View attachment 375398
Lines of high-speed trains are parked on tracks awaiting checks in Southwest China’s Chongqing Municipality, Feb. 6, 2017. All fast trains were required to undergo maintenance after 2am during the Spring Festival travel rush. (Photo/CFP)

View attachment 375400
Lines of high-speed trains are parked on tracks awaiting checks in Southwest China’s Chongqing Municipality, Feb. 6, 2017. All fast trains were required to undergo maintenance after 2am during the Spring Festival travel rush. (Photo/CFP)
Very small depot.
Chongqing needs a much bigger one!
 
.
China sees faster trains ahead

China Daily, February 7, 2017

China is expected to supply next-generation bullet trains capable of traveling at 400 km per hour for Russia's Moscow-Kazan line by 2020, which could enhance the country's position as the world's leader in high-speed rail products and services, said an expert working on the project.

The line is expected to be about 770 kilometers long and will run through seven Russian regions with a total population of more than 25 million. It will use regular high-speed trains rather than magnetic levitation trains.

"To ensure the operation, China will test the 400 km/h train in a selected part of the 709-kilometer Beijing-Shenyang high-speed railway line," said Yang Guowei, a researcher at the Institute of Mechanics of the Chinese Academy of Sciences in Beijing. The railroad is expected to be completed in 2019.

Yang's work unit is responsible for designing the shape of the high-speed trains.

Yang said China will be able to produce cargo trains for transporting regular goods, high-end products and industrial equipment at speeds ranging from 120 to 250 km/h between Asia and Europe by 2020.

Through innovation and development, China has the technology to make electric multiple-unit passenger trains with speeds between 200 and 250 km/h and has established a technology platform for producing trains with a speed of 350 km/h, according to data on the website of the National Railway Administration.

The country does not currently have trains with a speed of 400 km/h. However, Yang said that once they are developed, China can introduce them to the domestic market as well. However, the ticket price may increase because of higher operating costs.

Jia Limin, head of China's high-speed rail innovation program under the management of China Railway Rolling Stock Corp, said, "This could help China build cross-border high-speed train services with its neighboring countries that can alternate between different track gauges, ranging from 60 cm to 1.676 meters." The CRRC is China's rail vehicle manufacturer and exporter.

Wang Mengshu, an academician at the Chinese Academy of Engineering, said it will take time to test safety and control if the speed is increased to 400 km/h.

He said there is a big difference between Chinese engineers getting a high-speed rail system up and running at home and doing something similar in foreign markets. The differences in standards and regulations remain the challenges for China's rail vehicle exporters and infrastructure suppliers hoping to set up overseas. In addition, building costs are fairly expensive.

"Rather than investing in high-speed railway networks overseas, China should focus on expanding domestic lines with faster train speeds," said Wang.

The CRRC is trying to overcome technical barriers in its push to develop maglev trains with speeds of 600 km/h in its Qingdao research center in Shandong province.

http://www.china.org.cn/china/2017-02/07/content_40238379.htm
 
.
Technicians at Kunming CRH Depot
The safety guardians of the first HSR of Yunnan Province

727210d3gw1fbln0fe3hzj21kw11xn8d.jpg


727210d3gw1fblmyjtfnuj21kw11xtih.jpg


727210d3gw1fbln012df9j21kw11xn2x.jpg


727210d3gw1fbln09yuojj21kw11xn2a.jpg


727210d3gw1fbln03dvuoj21kw11xah7.jpg


727210d3gw1fblmywh766j21kw11x11e.jpg


@ahojunk @anant_s @TaiShang @cirr @terranMarine et al

China sees faster trains ahead

China Daily, February 7, 2017

China is expected to supply next-generation bullet trains capable of traveling at 400 km per hour for Russia's Moscow-Kazan line by 2020, which could enhance the country's position as the world's leader in high-speed rail products and services, said an expert working on the project.

The line is expected to be about 770 kilometers long and will run through seven Russian regions with a total population of more than 25 million. It will use regular high-speed trains rather than magnetic levitation trains.

"To ensure the operation, China will test the 400 km/h train in a selected part of the 709-kilometer Beijing-Shenyang high-speed railway line," said Yang Guowei, a researcher at the Institute of Mechanics of the Chinese Academy of Sciences in Beijing. The railroad is expected to be completed in 2019.

Yang's work unit is responsible for designing the shape of the high-speed trains.

Yang said China will be able to produce cargo trains for transporting regular goods, high-end products and industrial equipment at speeds ranging from 120 to 250 km/h between Asia and Europe by 2020.

Through innovation and development, China has the technology to make electric multiple-unit passenger trains with speeds between 200 and 250 km/h and has established a technology platform for producing trains with a speed of 350 km/h, according to data on the website of the National Railway Administration.

The country does not currently have trains with a speed of 400 km/h. However, Yang said that once they are developed, China can introduce them to the domestic market as well. However, the ticket price may increase because of higher operating costs.

Jia Limin, head of China's high-speed rail innovation program under the management of China Railway Rolling Stock Corp, said, "This could help China build cross-border high-speed train services with its neighboring countries that can alternate between different track gauges, ranging from 60 cm to 1.676 meters." The CRRC is China's rail vehicle manufacturer and exporter.

Wang Mengshu, an academician at the Chinese Academy of Engineering, said it will take time to test safety and control if the speed is increased to 400 km/h.

He said there is a big difference between Chinese engineers getting a high-speed rail system up and running at home and doing something similar in foreign markets. The differences in standards and regulations remain the challenges for China's rail vehicle exporters and infrastructure suppliers hoping to set up overseas. In addition, building costs are fairly expensive.

"Rather than investing in high-speed railway networks overseas, China should focus on expanding domestic lines with faster train speeds," said Wang.

The CRRC is trying to overcome technical barriers in its push to develop maglev trains with speeds of 600 km/h in its Qingdao research center in Shandong province.

http://www.china.org.cn/china/2017-02/07/content_40238379.htm
Apart from developing new models at higher speed, another key task of CRH in 2017 is a critical speed-up campaign, from 200km/h to 250km/h, from 300km/h to 350km/h.
 
. . . .

Rail operating staff are forgotten Heroes who take people to their destinations and close to their loved ones, while sacrificing their own time with their families.
when rest of the world celebrates, they remain ever vigilant and perform their duties.
i wish these brave men and women good wishes on Chinese Spring festival.
Let us all remember them for their selfless service.
 
.
No time to rest for CRH.

***

8.2 mln railway trips expected on Lantern Festival
Xinhua, February 11, 2017

China Railway Corp. expects 8.2 million trips to be made by rail Saturday as it is Lantern Festival, the end of the lunar new year celebrations.

The company said it had scheduled an additional 598 trains to cope with demand.

On Friday, 8.92 million trips were made by rail.

The Lunar New Year holiday was from Jan. 27 to Feb. 2 this year. The period, which is also known as Spring Festival, is known as the largest human migration in the world, as hundreds of millions of people go back to their hometowns, putting huge stress on the transportation system.

The first post-festival travel rush started toward the end of the week-long holiday. The second travel rush usually happens around Lantern Festival, when students return to start a new semester and migrant workers return to work.
 
.
No time to rest for CRH.

***

8.2 mln railway trips expected on Lantern Festival
Xinhua, February 11, 2017

China Railway Corp. expects 8.2 million trips to be made by rail Saturday as it is Lantern Festival, the end of the lunar new year celebrations.

The company said it had scheduled an additional 598 trains to cope with demand.

On Friday, 8.92 million trips were made by rail.

The Lunar New Year holiday was from Jan. 27 to Feb. 2 this year. The period, which is also known as Spring Festival, is known as the largest human migration in the world, as hundreds of millions of people go back to their hometowns, putting huge stress on the transportation system.

The first post-festival travel rush started toward the end of the week-long holiday. The second travel rush usually happens around Lantern Festival, when students return to start a new semester and migrant workers return to work.

Trains back to workplace!

水红线-北盘江大桥.jpg
 
.
Three generations of train drivers span 56 years
2017-02-07 15:42 Ecns.cn Editor: Mo Hong'e

U470P886T1D244398F12DT20170207161421.jpg

Jiang Aishun (R) and his son Qu Junjie, both are train drivers. (Photo/The Mirror)

(ECNS) -- Like father, like son. Three generations of a family have all worked for China's railways, a mirror of the country's development from steam power to internal combustion engines and finally to electricity.

Jiang Fulin was among the family's first generation of train drivers. Working for a Nanjing unit under Shanghai Railway Administration beginning in 1956, he traveled across the country with steam trains for the next 27 years.

His son Jiang Aishun recalled that his father used to come back with dirty clothes but leave home and return to work again with clean ones thanks to his mother.

The son was also fascinated with the sound of trains, so he followed in his father's footsteps to become a train driver, although steam was replaced with more powerful internal combustion and electricity engines. He no longer worried about dirty clothes.

201727162435.jpg

Jiang Aishun, the second generation of train driver of the family.(Photo/The Mirror)

U470P886T1D244403F12DT20170207160645.jpg

Jiang Aishun (L) and his son Qu Junjie. (Photo/The Mirror)

The third generation, Qu Junjie, who holds his mother's family name, continued the passion for trains since a young age.

But his father Jiang Aishun didn't support his career choice at the beginning as he thought the work was quite tiring and required constant night shifts.

Qu insisted and became a driver in 2011 on a high-speed train.

These three generations have driven trains for a combined 56 years, witnessing great strides in China's railway industry.

20172716542.jpg

Qu Junjie, the third generation of train driver of the family. (Photo/The Mirror)

U470P886T1D244404F12DT20170207160316.jpg

Qu Junjie, the third generation of the family, is also a train driver. (Photo/The Mirror)

The combined length of China's high speed railways surpassed 22,000 kilometers by the end of 2016, with the total national railway length now stretching 124,000 kilometers, according to China Railway Corp.

20172716136.jpg

Qu Junjie waits for passengers to get off the train.(Photo/The Mirror)


********

@AndrewJin , @anant_s
This is a nice story with changes through the 3 generations.
Grandfather was driver for steam locomotives.
Father is a driver for electric locomotives.
Son is a driver for HSR.
Maybe the grandson/granddaughter could be a driver for 600 kph maglev. LOL.

.
 
.
This is a nice story with changes through the 3 generations.
Grandfather was driver for steam locomotives.
Father is a driver for electric locomotives.
Son is a driver for HSR.
Maybe the grandson/granddaughter could be a driver for 600 kph maglev.
Some families are destined to serve their societies in certain fields and they do it quite well.
i know quite a few cases where 3-4 generations have served in armed forces and they take a lot of pride in it.
That said, i'm sure grandpa would be really proud to see his grandson driving HST and it also tells the story of Chinese progress in railways in matter of 3 generations.
I as a railfan feel quite proud of the family.
PS: i too hope for great grandson (or daughter) to one day pilot Maglev :smitten:

Locomotive cabins of new generation 3 phase electric locomotives and driving panel layouts are very impressive and ergonomically designed.
 
.
Back
Top Bottom