The Indian
Railways on Sunday started the first of a three-part series of trial
runs of its maiden semi-high speed train imported from Spain.
The
trial runs of the nine coach train manufactured by Madrid-based Talgo,
if successful, will catapult India into the select club of nations with
operational semi-high speed services capable of running at 160-200
kilometer per hour.
As
part of the tests kicked off today, the railways ran at 8:50 am a nine
coach Talgo train between Bareilly and Moradabad in Uttar Pradesh,
hauled by a 4,500 Horse Power.
"The
speed of the trial done today was 115 Kmph. It will be increased to 200
Kmph on the Mathura-Palwal section and more than 200 Kmph during trials
on the Delhi-Mumbai route," a senior rail ministry official told
Business Standard.
The
trial over the 90 Kilometer stretch between Bareilly and Moradabad will
last two weeks. On the first day of the trial run, the train carried
two Executive Class coaches, four Chair Car coaches, a cafeteria, a
power car and a tail-end coach with equipment.
The
test runs are planned to be conducted initially with empty coaches and
later with sand bags placed on the passenger seats. The second leg of
the testing session, being conducted by joint teams of railway engineers
and RDSO staff, will witness a trial run on the Mathura-Palwal section
of North-Central railway for 40 days at a speed of up to 200 Kmph.
Finally,
the trial run will be conducted on the Delhi-Mumbai route for two weeks
at a stretch. The trials, if successfull, will lead to the introduction
of the "super luxury" Talgo train service between Delhi and Mumbai in a
few months, reducing travel time to less than 12 hours from 18 hours at
present.
The
nine coach Talgo train was earlier shipped from Barcelona and arrived
at the Jawaharlal Nehru Port (JNPT) in Mumbai on April 21. From there,
the train was brought to Izzatnagar railway workshop near Bareilly
earlier this month. A three member team of technical experts from the
Railway Board had reached the workshop on Wednesday and were briefed by
Talgo engineers on all aspects of coaches.
Talgo
trains are light-weight and faster and are known for their unique
design features that includes articulated bogies - one bogey is shared
by two coaches - and independent rotation of wheels that allows smooth
negotiation of curves. Also, the low centre of gravity of the coaches
imparts additional stability and safety to coaches.
Indian
Railways had last month started its fastest service Gatimaan Express,
capable of running at 160 Kmph on the Delhi-Agra stretch. Train services
running at a speed of 160-200 Kmph are classified as semi-high speed.
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