Manila Bulletin

World’s fastest bullet train starts high-speed tests in Japan

-

Japan is pushing the limits of rail travel as it begins testing the fastest-ever shinkansen bullet train, capable of speeds of as much as 400 kilometers (249 miles) per hour.

Called the Alfa-X, the train is scheduled to go into service in 2030. Rail company JR East plans to operate it at 360 kilometers per hour. That would make it 10 kph faster than China’s Fuxing Hao, which links Beijing and Shanghai and has the same top speed.

To cope with massive wind resistance when entering tunnels, the AlfaX’s first car will mostly be a sleek nose, measuring 22 meters (72 feet). With just three windows, there looks to be hardly any space, if at all, for passengers in the

front. Painted in metallic silver with green stripes, the 10-car bullet train begins test runs Friday between the cities of Aomori and Sendai at night.

Japan’s bullet trains, which made their debut in the same year as the 1964 Tokyo Olympics, have become a symbol of the country’s focus on efficiency and reliabilit­y. Shinkansen­s are rarely late, even though they depart Tokyo Station every few minutes for Osaka, Kyoto, and other destinatio­ns around the archipelag­o, making them a viable alternativ­e to air travel. The Alfa-X is a key part of a plan to offer faster services to Sapporo, the biggest city on the northernmo­st island of Hokkaido.

“The developmen­t of the nextgenera­tion shinkansen is based on the key concepts of superior performanc­e, a high level of comfort, a superior operating environmen­t and innovative maintenanc­e,” East Japan Railway Co., better known as JR East, said in a statement.

Although the Alfa-X holds the title of the world’s fastest train right now, it may already be dethroned by the time it goes into service. That’s because a new maglev line is being built between Tokyo and Nagoya with operations starting in 2027. Traveling mostly through deep tunnels, the magnetical­ly levitated train will travel at a top speed of 505 kilometers per hour, cutting the time between the two cities to 40 minutes, from the current 110 minutes. (Bloomberg)

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines