Nagpur–Secunderabad line explained

Box Width:28em
Nagpur–Secunderabad line
Status:Operational
Locale:Maharashtra and Telangana
End:Secunderabad
Owner:Indian Railways
Operator:Central Railway, South Central Railway
Depot:Ajni, Kazipet, Moula Ali, Hyderabad
Stock:WAP-7, WAG-7 locos, WAG-9, WAG-9I, WDG-4, WDM-3A, WDG-3A, and WDM-2.
Tracklength:Mainline: 5810NaN0
Branch line:
Majri-Mudkhed 2660NaN0
Nizamabad–Peddapalli section
Tracks:2
Gauge: broad gauge
Electrification:1988–91
Speed:up to 130 km/h
Map State:collapsed

The Nagpur–Secunderabad line is a railway line connecting and Secunderabad.[1] A major portion of this 581km (361miles) track, from Nagpur to Kazipet, is part of the Delhi–Chennai line. It is also part of the Delhi–Hyderabad line. The line is under the jurisdiction of Central Railway and South-Central Railway.

History

With the completion of the Kazipet–Ballarshah link in 1929, Chennai was directly linked to Delhi.[2]

The Wadi–Secunderabad line was built in 1874 with financing by the Nizam of Hyderabad. It later became part of Nizam's Guaranteed State Railway. In 1889, the main line of the Nizam's Guaranteed State Railway was extended to Vijayawada, then known as Bezwada.[3]

As of 1909, "From Wadi on the Great Indian Peninsula Railway, the Nizam's Guaranteed State Railway runs east to Warangal and then south-east towards Bezwada on the East Coast section of the Madras Railway."[4]

Electrification

The Kazipet–Ramagundam sector was electrified in 1987–88, the Ramagundam–Balharshah–Nagpur sector in 1988–89, the Kazipet–Secunderabad sector in 1991–93 and Majri–Rajpur sector in 1994–95.[5]

Speed limits

The Delhi–Chennai Central line (Grand Trunk route) is classified as a "Group A" line which can take speeds up to 160 km/h.[6]

The Wadi–Secunderabad–Kazipet line is classified as "Group B" line and can take speeds up to 130 km/h.[7]

Passenger movement

Railway stations on this line, namely and, are amongst the top hundred booking stations of Indian Railway.[8]

Sheds and workshops

Ajni has an electric loco shed and a diesel trip shed. It is primarily a freight shed with around 190 locos. It houses WAG-7, WAG-9, WAG-9I, and WAP-7 locos. Kazipet diesel loco shed houses WDM-2, WDM-3A, WDG-3A and WDG-4 locos. Opened in 2006, Kazipet electric loco shed houses 150+ WAG-7 locos. Maula Ali has a shed for diesel locomotives and EMUs. It houses WDM-2, WDM-3A, WDG-3A, DHMUs (3-car and 6-car) and EMUs. Hyderabad has an electric trip shed.[9]

Nagpur has a coach maintenance workshop. Ajni has goods wagon repair facility. There is a routine overhaul depot for wagon maintenance at and coaching maintenance depots at Secunderabad, Hyderabad and Kazipet.[9]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Chakraborty. Aniket. 2017-04-03. Russian Railways to sign Nagpur–Secunderabad line modernisation contract. 2020-07-06. www.rbth.com.
  2. Web site: IR History: Early Days – III. Chronology of railways in India, Part 3 (1900–1947). 26 November 2013.
  3. Web site: IR History: Early days II. 1870–1899. IRFCA. 26 November 2013.
  4. Web site: Hyderabad – Imperial Gazetteer of India. IRFCA. 26 November 2013.
  5. Web site: History of Electrification. IRFCA. 26 November 2013.
  6. Web site: Chapter II – The Maintenance of Permanent Way. 26 November 2013.
  7. Web site: Chapter II – The Maintenance of Permanent Way. 4 December 2013.
  8. Web site: Indian Railways Passenger Reservation Enquiry . Availability in trains for Top 100 Booking Stations of Indian Railways . IRFCA . 26 November 2013 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20140510115649/http://www.indianrail.gov.in/7days_Avl.html . 10 May 2014 .
  9. Web site: Sheds and Workshops. IRFCA. 26 November 2013.