Revision as of 00:11, 29 December 2005 editSchmuckyTheCat (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users, Pending changes reviewers, Rollbackers23,934 edits see talk← Previous edit | Revision as of 16:46, 29 December 2005 edit undoInstantnood (talk | contribs)32,683 edits As mentioned, it's meaningless to link to an article on a geographical region.Next edit → | ||
Line 3: | Line 3: | ||
It was formerly known as 廣九鐵路華段 (literally means ''the Chinese Section of the Canton-Kowloon Railway'') during the ] era (known in Hong Kong as Chinese Section of the ]). | It was formerly known as 廣九鐵路華段 (literally means ''the Chinese Section of the Canton-Kowloon Railway'') during the ] era (known in Hong Kong as Chinese Section of the ]). | ||
With a length of 146 kilometres, it was the first railway in ] to reach the speed of 220 ], though it is limited to about 200 km/h during commercial operation. It has a dual-track 200-km/h passenger line, and a single-track 120-km/h mixed passenger and freight line. Construction of a fourth track has commenced in 2005, and will be the first four-track railway in mainland China. | With a length of 146 kilometres, it was the first railway in ] to reach the speed of 220 ], though it is limited to about 200 km/h during commercial operation. It has a dual-track 200-km/h passenger line, and a single-track 120-km/h mixed passenger and freight line. Construction of a fourth track has commenced in 2005, and will be the first four-track railway in mainland China. | ||
The run uses domestically built Xinshisu ]s with a pitch of up to 8 degrees. The trains are 165m long, consisting of a ], five passenger cars, and a trailing car. They are noted for being very quiet (less than 65]) even at 200kph. | The run uses domestically built Xinshisu ]s with a pitch of up to 8 degrees. The trains are 165m long, consisting of a ], five passenger cars, and a trailing car. They are noted for being very quiet (less than 65]) even at 200kph. |
Revision as of 16:46, 29 December 2005
Guangshen Railway or Guangzhou-Shenzhen Railway (Simplified Chinese: 广深铁路 or 广深线) is a railway in the Guangdong Province of the People's Republic of China, between Guangzhou and Shenzhen.
It was formerly known as 廣九鐵路華段 (literally means the Chinese Section of the Canton-Kowloon Railway) during the Republic of China era (known in Hong Kong as Chinese Section of the Kowloon-Canton Railway).
With a length of 146 kilometres, it was the first railway in mainland China to reach the speed of 220 km/h, though it is limited to about 200 km/h during commercial operation. It has a dual-track 200-km/h passenger line, and a single-track 120-km/h mixed passenger and freight line. Construction of a fourth track has commenced in 2005, and will be the first four-track railway in mainland China.
The run uses domestically built Xinshisu tilting trains with a pitch of up to 8 degrees. The trains are 165m long, consisting of a power car, five passenger cars, and a trailing car. They are noted for being very quiet (less than 65dBA) even at 200kph.
It meets the Jingjiu Railway (Beijing-Kowloon Railway) in Dongguan, with which share its route. It joins the KCR East Rail (formerly the British Section of the Kowloon-Canton Railway) on the border with the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region of the People's Republic of China.
Cross-border services from Hong Kong to Dongguan (Changping), Guangzhou East, Foshan and Zhaoqing, as well as to Beijing West and Shanghai use its route.
Stations and distance
Station | Distance (km) |
---|---|
Guangzhou | 0 |
Guangzhou East | 8 |
Shelong | 69 |
Dongguan (Changping) | 90 |
Zhangmutou | 103 |
Tangtouxia | 114 |
Pinghu | 127 |
Buji | 139 |
Shenzhen | 147 |