Tokyo Waterfront Area Rapid Transit 70-000 series | |
Service: | 1996 - Present |
Manufacturer: | Kawasaki Heavy Industries |
Yearconstruction: | 1995 - 2004 |
Successor: | TWR 71-000 series |
Refurbishment: | 2011–2018 |
Numberbuilt: | 86 vehicles |
Numberservice: | 80 vehicles (8 sets) (+6 vehicles converted to 209-3100 series) |
Formation: | 10 cars per trainset |
Fleetnumbers: | Z1–3, Z6–10 |
Operator: | Tokyo Waterfront Area Rapid Transit |
Depots: | Yashio Depot |
Lines: | |
Carbody: | Stainless steel |
Trainlength: | 200.84m (658.92feet) |
Carlength: | 20.42m (66.99feet) (end cars) 20m (70feet) (intermediate cars) |
Width: | 2.8m (09.2feet) |
Height: | 4067mm |
Doors: | Sliding, 4 pairs per side |
Maxspeed: | 110km/h |
Electricsystem: | overhead catenary |
Collectionmethod: | Pantograph |
Safety: | ATS-P, ATC |
The is a DC commuter electric multiple unit (EMU) train type operated in the Tokyo area of Japan by the Tokyo Waterfront Area Rapid Transit. The train was built by Kawasaki Heavy Industries and first entered revenue service in 1996. Its design is based on the 209 series.
, eight 10-car sets, numbered Z1 to Z3 and Z6 to Z10, are based at Yashio Depot in Tokyo (accessed via a spur located between Tennōzu Isle Station and Tokyo Teleport Station). These sets are formed as follows with six motored ("M") cars and four non-powered trailer ("T") cars.[1]
← Shin-Kiba Ōsaki, Ōmiya, Kawagoe → | |||||||||||
Car No. | 10 | 9 | 8 | 7 | 6 | 5 | 4 | 3 | 2 | 1 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Designation | Tc2A | M1A | M2A | T2A | M1A | M2B | T2A | M1A | M2A | Tc2B | |
Numbering | 70-xx0 | 70-xx1 | 70-xx2 | 70-xx3 | 70-xx4 | 70-xx5 | 70-xx6 | 70-xx7 | 70-xx8 | 70-xx9 |
Four 4-car trains were originally built and entered service in 1996 when the Rinkai Line opened between Shin-Kiba and Tokyo Teleport. A fifth train was built in 1999 for service expansion, and a sixth was built in 2001 for the extension of the line to Tennōzu Isle. In 2002, for the opening of the entire line to Ōsaki, the first five trains were extended to 6 cars, the sixth train was extended to 10 cars, and four new 10-car trains were built, for a total of five 6-car and five 10-car trains. The 10-car trains were also used on through services to/from the JR Saikyō Line.
From October 2004, the five 6-car trains were reformed as three 10-car trains. Six new trailer cars were built for the conversion, while six surplus cab and motor cars were sold to JR East to create 209-3100 series EMUs used on the Hachikō Line and Kawagoe Line.[2]
Six former 70-000 series cars were converted in 2004 and 2005 to become 209-3100 series EMUs for use by JR East. The subsequent identities of these cars are as shown below. (The former car numbers were reused when other spare cars were renumbered.)[2]
Former car number | New car number | New set number | Date returned to service | |
---|---|---|---|---|
70-020 | KuHa 209-3101 | 71 | 14 March 2005 | |
70-027 | MoHa 209-3102 | 72 | 16 December 2004 | |
70-028 | MoHa 208-3102 | 72 | 16 December 2004 | |
70-029 | KuHa 208-3101 | 71 | 14 March 2005 | |
70-030 | KuHa 209-3102 | 72 | 16 December 2004 | |
70-039 | KuHa 209-3102 | 72 | 16 December 2004 |
The fleet of 70-000 series is expected to be replaced by a new train type in 2024.[3] The design concept for what will become the 71-000 series was unveiled on 6 November 2023.[4] Rollout of the new trains is scheduled for Q2 2025 with the full fleet of eight sets completing entry into service by Q2 2027.