Mini-shinkansen explained

is the name given to the concept of converting narrow gauge railway lines to standard gauge for use by shinkansen train services in Japan. Unlike the high-speed Shinkansen lines, the mini-Shinkansen lines have a maximum speed of only 130abbr=onNaNabbr=on. Two mini-Shinkansen routes have been constructed: the Yamagata Shinkansen and Akita Shinkansen.[1]

Concept

The Mini-Shinkansen concept was first developed in JNR days, but was not formally proposed until November 1987, following the formation of East Japan Railway Company (JR East). The concept involved regauging existing gauge lines to standard gauge and linking them to the Shinkansen network to allow through-running. While the track gauge was widened, the loading gauge remained unchanged, requiring the construction of new Shinkansen trains with a narrower cross-section. These would be capable of running at high speed (the E6 series trains have a maximum speed capability of) on Shinkansen tracks, either on their own or coupled to full-sized sets, and run at conventional narrow-gauge speeds (around) on the mini-shinkansen tracks. Speeds on converted lines would also be raised where possible.[1]

Yamagata Shinkansen

See main article: Yamagata Shinkansen. The first mini-Shinkansen route to be built was the Yamagata Shinkansen, converted from the section of the Ōu Main Line between Fukushima on the Tohoku Shinkansen and Yamagata in Yamagata Prefecture. Work started in 1988, with Yamagata Shinkansen services commencing on 1 July 1992. Services were operated by a new fleet of 400 Series Shinkansen trains, at up to on the Tōhoku Shinkansen and on the Yamagata Shinkansen section.[2] The success of this initiative led to the conversion of a further of the line to, opening on 4 December 1999.

Akita Shinkansen

See main article: Akita Shinkansen. Following the success of the Yamagata Shinkansen conversion, a scheme was proposed to construct a second mini-Shinkansen route from Morioka in Iwate Prefecture, then the northern terminus of the Tohoku Shinkansen, with Akita in Akita Prefecture. This involved regauging the Tazawako Line from Morioka to Ōmagari and of the Ōu Main Line from Ōmagari to Akita.[1] This opened on 22 March 1997 with Komachi services using new E3 Series Shinkansen trains.[2] On 16 March 2013, E6 series trains entered service on this line, initially at a maximum speed of on the Tohoku Shinkansen section. In March 2014, the maximum speed on the Tohoku Shinkansen was increased to .

Rolling stock

The following rolling stock was built for use on mini-shinkansen lines.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Book: Semmens, Peter. High Speed in Japan: Shinkansen - The World's Busiest High-speed Railway . Platform 5 Publishing . 1997 . Sheffield, UK . 1-872524-88-5.
  2. Book: Yamanouchi, Shūichirō . 東北・上越新幹線 . Tohoku & Joetsu Shinkansen . JTB Can Books . 2002 . Tokyo, Japan . 4-533-04513-8.