When I lived in Tokyo with my uncle, I took Shinkansen to ski resorts. It is amazing how the trains can take you to ski resorts within 2 hours while just sitting down in a comfy chair, drinking or eating, or sleeping, and not worrying about driving home after skiing all day. I love shinkansen man, it's awesome.
You're going to Nagano Prefecture? I live in Yamanashi prefecture and sometimes I go to Nagano area by taking the Shinkansen, that prefecture is good (and near where I live!) to do skiing!!
@@Desi365 Mostly only tunnels along the path... There's not much steep slopes for the Shinkansen because Nagano City and Matsumoto are both down in a valley so they are a little high comparing with Tokyo, but not a big altitude...
Sometimes I feel like shinkansen is basically a high speed metro on the scale of an entire country. Infact many metros have more than 3 min peak hour headway.
It’s more expensive than metro, but locals may still use it for commute(if a company pays). I was blown away by seeing at most 7 mins intervals between high speed trains through the day.
One thing I like about Shinkansen is that non reserved ticket for some services practically function as high speed commuter rail. You don't have to have fixed schedule and the seats in non reserved cars are first come first serve basis. It makes travelling around extremely convenient. No need for advanced booking, just use applicable JR passes or buy a ticket from the ticket machine, then board the next train you want to.
the downside is that in certain sections and times it's hard to find an empty seat. Also in most cases one can buy the reserved tickets even 10 mins before the departure time. So I never book in advance, just go there and look for the reserved tickets and if it isn't available just take the non-reserved option.
Honestly at this point I'm shocked they don't use a smart card system to tag on-tag off considering just how tight their schedule is, its basically a high speed rail system built to the standards and expectations of metro.
Very confusing which are reserved and which aren't unless you are physically there to look at the platform screens though, and waiting at a station and the next 2 trains are reserved seating only before one comes which has non-reserved cars is annoying.
Only the Tokaido, Sanyo, and Kyushu Shinkansen lines from Tokyo to Kagoshima-Chuo have unreserved seats on all trains. Therefore, it is a good idea to use unreserved seats to travel freely from Tokyo to Kyoto, Osaka, Hiroshima, etc. However, the fastest Shinkansen trains in the Tohoku and Hokuriku regions, such as Tokyo to Kanazawa, Sendai, Morioka, and Hakodate, are all reserved seats, so there is only one train per hour that allows you to travel with unreserved seats only, which is quite inconvenient.
I am Japanese. This video explains Japanese Shinkansen very well,and I saw a lot of effort in researching and expressing. Expressing the names of several stations in the name of famous city which is near from the station (like Hakata to Fukuoka) makes the video easy to undertsand for many people. And I was very surprised at the section of Narita Shinkansen. That proves how hard you research Shinkansen, I think. I'm glad to hear that foreign people learn about Japanese railway,as a rail fan. Thank you for posting such a nice video! I would be glad if you could explain about Japanese conventional railways sometime!
And the most amazing thing is that there are 16 trains in one direction per hour during the busy season. All trains are managed in units of 15 seconds.
Man it's so depressing how impossible it is to have something like this in the US. I know we gotta keep pushing for it but I have my doubts I'll ever ride on a train like this unless I visit another country. I desperately want a high speed rail line from Portland, Ore to Vancouver, BC.
@@whattheydidnttellyouwithbr2844 The US is terminally addicted to cars and is unwilling and unable to do anything else. If it happens at all it will be because we are dragged kicking and screaming the whole way. That's not to say that anyone should just give up pushing for it but it's going to take a shift in culture and probably a lot of suffering due to climate change for it to happen.
How does building high speed rail in the US help the Military Industrial Complex and the Oil Companies? It doesn't, that's why it is almost impossible to get built.
About 16:55. In contrast to Germany, where "It is very much possible to show up to a station 15 minutes AFTER scheduled departure of an intercity train, grab a ticket and then head to the platform and get on board"
Fascinating this can be done. So simply done with just a machine paying with cash or card. I watched John Daub's Only In Japan livestream videos proving you can catch trains in a hurry. T1D Wanderer took a challenge how punctual are local trains in Kansai transferring to another train without leaving so much time in between without missing a train.
@@neubro1448 or you just use DB's Navigator app to buy your tickets, so no machine else needed. On the train, you can even use comfort check-in to not be disturbed by the train crew for ticket control. In Germany, buying tickets for public transit is being limited by at least two minutes before departure, but on long distance trains, they changed it when they abandoned on-board sales of tickets by the stewards. Since then, I think you can even buy your ticket in the app even around 10 minutes after departure. (And frankly spoken, ticket controls on long distance trains are quite rare, I had several rides across the country with no control in several trains.)
In France you buy the tickets days if not weeks before the trip to get the lowest price, it gets canceled because of strikes, and you come the next day at the station after the scheduled departure of your TGV to painstakingly claim your money back.
Iwill be back on the Shinkansen this year and will be riding all the way from Nagasaki aboard JR Kyushu’s new Shinkansen to Sendai via the Tokaido and Tohoku Shinkansen. Japanese High Speed rail is virtually unmatched when you combine efficiency, cleanliness, punctuality and frequency all into one. What makes it unique compared to Europe is that it operates on completely dedicated high speed track - operating akin to a high speed subway. You can base yourself in one city, say Nagoya, for the duration of your trip and make day trips to Osaka, Tokyo etc.
Just finished my 21 day run having an Airbnb 5 minutes from Shin Osaka. Paid 66k yen for the 21 day pass. I did some calculations to see how much this would have cost. I saved 400k yen ahahahaha. Buy a JR pass folks.
@@RMTransit sorry to bother you, but have you ever considered doing a video on safety on transit systems. It would be a interesting topic as it has become a growing concern in Toronto, Calgary, Edmonton and Ottawa, as well as US and European cities.
That was what really struck me on a 2 week vacation in Tokyo. Whenever I got a little tired of the city, I could travel really quite far on day trips, on a whim, without worrying about missing my train home. Shinkansen service was so frequent that it often felt like a natural extension of the Tokyo metro system. And luckily for me, some stations were randomly located in surprisingly rural places. Presumably to placate local governments. Perfect for exploring some proper Japanese nature.
I'm from Spain and although we have a very good system, I think obviously Japan is the king of high speed. You can see the work and dedication in every detail of the system.
I rode the Spanish high speed rail and it was good, but nothing like the precision timing of the Shinkansen. I think the train was based on the German design.
It should not be seen as a completion. Japan and Spain, by all accounts, both have excellent high speed rail systems. That being said, Spain has a larger land mass, more kilometers of rail, a population less than half of Japan’s, an economy a bit larger than a third of Japan’s, and it started decades later. Kudos Spain!
u must be kidding me lol Saudi (with Siemens) and China (CRH) have 350km/h operational speed for YEARS The king of speed ofc is Siemens and CRH, but japan is King of train integration and facility
Just wanted to say thank you for using kilometers for all your distances and just using the metric system in general. So many English speaking TH-camrs use imperial without even thinking that the rest of the world is in metric
I watched this video while riding the 5hr Nozomi from Shinagawa to Hakata (Fukuoka)! Decided to take the shinkansen instead of a flight despite the longer travel time because there's so much to see out the window to keep me from getting bored, including the magnificent Mt Fuji. I've been living in Japan for over six years now and their technological advancements in every aspect of life still never fails to impress me.
I spent two weeks in Japan a few years ago (Nagoya, then Tokyo, then Kyoto) and was impressed that I never once had want for a car while there. The transit was amazing! I definitely have a goal of going back and riding the Shinkansen end to end
@@ユニティーちゃん depending on where u go . If u visiting ancient shrines , some attractions can walk within minutes , but some require 20 to 30 minutes walking, if u able to walk then u can walk using the google map , if not can ride the bus from the Kyoto station or other train station in the Kyoto city area to your destination .
I went there about 20 years ago and took trains everywhere, from the shinkansen to slower regional services. Always clean, always on time. A couple of times we got taxis, and they were clean and comfortable as well. No complaints at all.
Originally, Tohoku Shinkansen and Tokaidou Shinkansen was planned to have through service trains. I've seen plans of JNR (National Railroad) from the 1980s for Tokyo station, and it clearly showed tracks 12(now 21), 13(now 22), 14, 15, and 16 connected to both lines, while tracks 17, 18, and 19 being for Tokaidou Shinkansen only. Another cancelled project was Jouetsu Shinkansen's Omiya-Shinjuku section. Originally, Jousetsu Shinkansen was planned to terminate at Shinjuku station. For that reason, there is still a underground space reserved for the Jousetsu Shinkansen at Shinjuku. That is why Toei Shinjuku line is so deep underground at B5F, because Jouetsu Shinkansei's Shinjuku station was planned at B3F. The reason Shinkansen use standard gauge instead of narrow gauge like the rest of Japanese trains is because, when they started planning of the bullet train way back in the 1930s the wanted a train that could eventually do though service with Chousen (Korean) Railroad (which was Japanese territory back then), and Manshu (Manchukuo) Railroad (which was under the control of the Japanese government) which both used standard gauge.
@Zaydan Alfariz in 1939 they had a prototype working to persuade the people of the tech. However WW2 started and they lost. The amazing part is they only started planning the train system again in 1957 and was build and operating before the first Tokyo Olympics in 1964. They also started research on Mag Lev 2 years before completion of the Shinkansen and is only now that it is being built and to be operational in 2027.
A through service from Kagoshima to Hokkaido is simply impossible because both 50Hz and 60Hz AC power are used in Japan. East Japan got their first AC generator from Germany so it's running at 50Hz, while West Japan got theirs from the States so it's running at 60Hz. This legacy continues to this day and results in Tokaido-Sanyo-Kyushu system running at 25kV 60Hz, while Tohoku-Hokkaido/Joetsu system running at 25kV 50Hz. The only dual-frequency powered line is Hokuriku Shinkansen. It runs with E7/W7 series EMUs which can adapt the AC supply frequency automatically.
Your stated reasoning for the use of standard gauge on the Shinkansen is wrong. Standard is used because it allows for high speed running. Narrow gauge has less lateral stability than standard. The fastest narrow gauge trains in Japan is the Keisei Skyliner and the former Hakutaka limited express, both of which operate(d) at 160km/h. "instead of narrow gauge like the rest of Japanese trains " Not all of Japan's non-shinkansen trains run on narrow gauge.
@@Inspadave That's because those who are in charge (either in politics or in corporations) are the baby boomers (from the showa era generation) that are now starting to retire and they are still stuck in the past and have trouble to get used to the new technologies
The rolling stock really is something else on the network, along with the infrastructure, dozens of long tunnels and massive bridges from city to city that wouldn't look out of place in China linking massive intercity terminals connected to the metro and reigonal rail, its amazing
I used to enjoy seeing all the variety of rolling stock the Shinkansen offered back then, coming in all kinds of shapes and colours. Unfortunately, most of them are no longer in use, and it looks like all of the new series are just variations of the N700 series, at least in the southern corridors. It looks like they have finally develop the most efficient train model, cannot blame them.
@@kentakiman_gmd performance aspects like top speed is more limited by the infrastructure so the current goal became providing more services and passenger comfort
China? Is this video about China? But I can't see any China, I found only Japan. I am wondering if you think Japan and China are the same country or if there is a China topic somewhere that I do not understand. If you think China and Japan are the same country, then someone who thinks USA, Canada and Mexico are the same country is also correct.
I didn't expect an intro to the Shinkansen! Amazing video as usual! Some corrections: - Along with the New Shuttle, the other compromise JNR made to the protestors of the Omiya to Ueno section of the Tohoku/Joetsu/Hokuriku Shinkansens was the Saikyo Line, which runs alongside the Shinkansen between Akabane and Omiya. The results of this compromise has had... There's no words for how positively impactful Saikyo Line is. - The steepest section of the Shinkansen is actually on the Hokuriku Shinkansen between Takasaki and Karuizawa, rather than on the mini-Shinkansens. In that section, the max speed is reduced to 210km/h with very little limit increases possible due to limitations of the trains' motors as well as the curviness of the section. Some additional notes: - The section between Utsunomiya and Morioka is not necessarily getting a speed limit increase because it has been incredibly difficult to run trains at 360km/h while achieving ideal noise level goals. - Along with the noise of entering and exiting tunnels, the reason Japan's Shinkansen stock has so much emphasis on aerodynamics is because the pressure (from which the noise results from) of less aerodynamic trains at high speeds entering the tunnel could adversely affect the speed inside the tunnel and durability of the trains. - On the same topic as the previous point, one of the highest source of drags on high speed trains is the pantograph. Japanese HSR stock has interesting ways to tackle this issue, some of which include the big "fins" mounted on the sides of the trains next to the pantographs.
@Zaydan Alfariz Maglev, or magnetic **levitation**, is very different from third rail. Third rail passes electricity to trains; Maglev tracks create an opposing magnetic field to cause movement.
@Zaydan Alfariz Doesn't matter; Maglev is not third rail. Totally different technologies. For the physical definition, you're confounding two sides (electricity and magnetism) of Maxwell's equation as the same thing, when they're not.
On the speed restriction on Hokuriku Shinkansen, it is actually the downhill direction where speed is restricted to 210 km/h. This is to retain sufficient braking power in case of emergency. E7 series can do 260km/h at the uphill direct. EMU trains are generally better at handling steeper gradients and successive speed-ups and slow-downs. On increasing the speed of Tohoku Shinkansen, Fastech 360 concluded that, as long as the standard Shinkansen was coupled with the mini-Shinkansen, the noise would be beyond the legal requirement. Therefore, ALFA-X set out to find a feasible design to achieve 360km/h when it is running on its own. The experiment is still ongoing. 360km/h needed to be achieved or the Hokkaido Shinkansen business plan (Connecting Sapporo with Tokyo in 4 hours) will not stand. Actually, the fastest Hayabusa services to Hakodate do not couple with Komachi at Morioka hints the service pattern when Hokkaido Shinkansen is extended to Sapporo in the future.
JR Central's _shinkansen_ rolling stock mount their pantographs on big humps on the car's roof & I thought its to house electrical equipment, since being a multiple unit without a locomotive, space must have been more at a premium. That was until I saw newer JR East rolling stock (E5 onwards) that did away with the hump but partially concealed the pantograph with roof-mounted fins
Brilliant summary and analysis of Japan's amazing Shinkansen network, not only has there never been a fatality on the network but this is a country famous for the frequency and magnitude of its' earthquakes. An amazing achievement.
Went to Japan for the first time a couple of weeks ago and loved the Shinkansen. It's all separate in the stations (2nd gateline), loads of legroom and fast and on time. One thing that wasn't mentioned was the sheer fame of the "bullet train". The normal man on the street knows about it, and I've been asked several times "did you go on the bullet train"...
Great job on this one! You even pronounced the Japanese city names very well. So many other Norh American TH-cam presenters mumble and stumble when saying foreign city names. You obviously made the effort to learn the correct names. Well done!
Not counting suicides, there's been a number of deaths caused by the Shinkansen network: Someone got caught in a door and crushed to death. That's it. ... What? One is a number!
I live in Sapporo, recently there was an event promoting local rail and the Shinkansen extension. They set up a mini H5 Hayabusa loop toddlers could ride on, so cute 😭
IMO JR Hokkaido don't have the money to build the remaining Shinkansen section to Sapporo while maintaining services to remote parts of Hokkaido at the same time.
Another key but less flashy project JR East is working on is the Fukushima Station Approach Line--currently the connecting track between the Tohoku and Yamagata Shinkansen lines at Fukushima Station is single-tracked, branching off from the northbound local track. This means southbound trains from Yamagata stop on the northbound platform, then have to cross over the northbound tracks to get back on the Tohoku line (and the southbound Tohoku train it gets coupled with also has to cross over the tracks twice), which is a big operational bottleneck for a station that has trains passing or stopping every ~2 minutes in peak periods. They're currently building a second connecting track that will pass under the existing Tohoku Shinkansen tracks and allow southbound trains to merge directly onto the local southbound track with no grade crossings. The project started construction in 2021 and is expected to finish in 2026.
Good point! The Fukushima Approach Line is important in speeding up the Yamagata Shinkansen and also removing the single track bottleneck and crossing the main line :)
I'm always fascinated how the Hayabusa service (E5) and the Komachi (E6) couple and uncouple at Morioka. It's so exciting to see the trains separate and join.
Did you mean Morioka? Coming from Tokyo, Komachi E6 is uncoupled in Morioka and travels on to Akita and back from there. As far as I'm aware only E5/H5 sets travel to Aomori and onward. But yes, never gets boring to watch.
In India we are developing high speed rail with the help of Japan . Soon we will also be able to experience this amazing train or something similar to it. Thanks Japan 🙂
I rode the Hokuriku shinkansen in 2019 - days after a flood closed it and their main maintenance yard, mind you. It's an exceptional rail system and you've covered it well!
You have made me positive about the future of Toronto transit in general which is a big reversal for me. I also appreciate the international context, high quality, thoughtfulness, and positivity of your content. Please keep it up!
The Shinkansen is simply amazing! I am rather tall (2.05 meters), yet I had ample leg room in the Shinkansen (using economy class), my legs didn't even nearly touch the seat in front of me! When riding trains in Germany (my home), I need one seat to sit at and another one, where I can use the leg room. Also, the puntuality is simply out of this world. I had finished my business earlier than expected and was asking in the service center, whether I could take an earlier train. The lady told me the next one arrives in a couple of seconds (can't recall the exact number), and printed me a new ticket, I went straight to the platform, and the train pulled into the station, just as I reached the top of the escalators leading to the platform. In Germany, not only would it have taken forever to be served at the service point (where they'd probably even be unaware whether trains were running today or not), the punctuality is so unrealiable, that it'd be a long wait regardless (in Germany, a high speed train with less than six minutes counts as punctual, try being six minutes late to a job interview, and see, whether they'd accept that standard of punctuality).
Though Germans love to complain about Deutsche Bahn and its punctuality. I have lived in Germany and I hold a fair share of grudges about your country, however your train system is still really, really good compared to the rest of the world. With the 9-euro-ticket I was able to travel from Berlin to Munich and back for only 9 euros. It was a long ride as they were Nahverkehr trains, but still! For that price it was absolutely amazing! Hope you make that permanent. Here where I am (we're like 4 times bigger than Germany), even having a metro system in the 9 million capital city still sounds like a dream.
@@Skip6235 Well, only 65% of trains arrived within that 6 minute margin, meaning 35% of trains arrived later than that, possibly hours later. Also, cancelled trains aren't included in this statistic.
This channel is igniting my undiscovered obsession with high speed rails . Also excited to see the Tohoku Shinkansen run in India altho its probably going to be in 3-4 years!
As a person who likes to make videos about trains in the Netherlands, I really hope that we will once build a high-speed line to Germany. hsl south is not enough for my enthousiasm. maybe I'll go to Japan someday because who doesn't like bullet trains? As always, i enjoyed your video so thank you!
The thing right now is we dont have a real need for highspees rail. Our country is very small remember that. In return we do have the best bike/road infrastructure so its a trade off i will take. Would be nice to see more High speed lines going to outside places.
You mean building a High Speed line on Hollandstrecke Köln Duisburg/Dortmund-Mülheim Styrum Oberhausen Emmerich am Rhein Zevenaar Arnhem Utrecht International section and domestic Dutch side Spoorlijn Amsterdam Centraal Utrecht. When it comes to high-speed line towards Germany from the Netherlands these trains need to support 15kv 16.7hz Deutsche Bahn Netze 25kv 50hz Netherlands outside of the high speed line if built 1.5kv DC future 3kv DC
In Texas US, there is a project to build a high speed rail line from Dallas to Houston, and they said that they would be using rolling stock adapted from those used on the Shinkansen. Unfortunately, that project seems to have stagnated after legal difficulties acquiring the alignment. They currently own the whole alignment, but are in great debt and there's been no update for a very long time. Edit: Or maybe they don't actually own all the land yet, but they do have the legal right to use eminent domain... after making it to the Texas Supreme Court
Thanks Reece. Well done. I laughed when you said the mini Shinkansen reminded you of bulbous British stock. As you would know, the loading gauge for most narrow gauge lines in Japan is actually wider than the restrictive clearance required on British standard gauge.
Hey there! Hope you doing fine, Thanks for the great content and for inspiring me on creating a video explaining why Japan is INSANELLY well designed. Wish you the very best!
I actually live along where the new maglev line is going to be opened, and last I checked we'll actually have full operation between Tokyo and Nagoya starting in 4 years which is super exciting! Residents can also actually ride the test runs too which is really cool. It's on a lottery system though and it's of course very popular so it is a tad difficult to get into
Great video. An important one for the channel. Thanks for explaining the reason for the long pointy noses. I had assumed it was just due to general wind-tunnel testing, but the tunnel noise reason explains why we haven't seen designs like that in other countries.
Been wanting this... My favourite High speed rail of all time. Hope to seeing the high speed rail becoming a reality in 🇮🇳. Also, can't wait for Chuo Shinkansen as well. Also, I read somewhere that America's working on getting their their own Maglev lines once the Chuo Shinkansen is operational.
I remember once taking the Shinkansen from Kagoshima at the very bottom of Kyushu to Osaka because a hurricane cancelled my flight. I actually outran the hurricane and got to experience it twice.
Well explained video! It's very amazing to see how Japan's high speed railway have upped their level to compete and be way ahead of other high speed trains in other countries
I'm Japanese. I'm grateful that you've introduced Japan's Shinkansen to people all over the world. I was surprised to see how well you've researched Japan's unique circumstances, such as the fact that the track width is different from that of conventional lines, unlike in Europe. I look forward to watching your future videos.
What isn’t mentioned is that it’s mega-reliable - the Tohoku Shinkansen averages 30 seconds lateness over a YEAR. No other country comes close. However, it is also very expensive which is why air travel even over shorter distances is still popular.
Thank you so much for sharing Japanese bullet trains!! I am quite proud of your sharing Japanese bullets trains! I think they are the best trains on the world. I am looking forward to watching your chanel regarding Japanese trains from now on!
I've ridden high speed rail in both Spain and Japan. I loved Spain and the Renfe is solid infrastructure, but the Shinkansen is next level! And if they get a 500 kph line working that will be astounding! I'm definitely rooting for them!
The Shinkansen is simply amazing. I've been traveling to Japan for over 20 years now but riding the Shinkansen never gets old. The Green-sha is so nice. The whole network is amazing. You can walk from your house, get on a commuter line, get Tokyo station, and from there with some stops, you can get to Kyushu. That's simply amazing. Oh and on-time too, every time.
That was great Reece. Excellent as always. However, as it first opened in 1964, while you never mentioned it, while these is an Earthquake warning system, I assume there is also a Godzilla warning system. He was quite prolific then and I’m sure they made some allowance for this.
Some of the Shinkansen lines just blow my mind with how different the transportation priorities are there compared to North America. Connecting all the way up to Hokkaido and all the way down to Kyushu with additional branches is mindboggling. Imagine if the Northeast Corridor in the US was true HSR and extended all the way up to Portland, Maine and all the way down to the Research Triangle in North Carolina, with additional branches to places like Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania and Norfolk, Virginia. And even that's kind of underselling the Shinkansen given the tremendous geographical challenges in Japan.
Oh I hope to ride it one day. Love to do a video about the Shinkansen. 🚄 🚅 Also love that it’s in its own tracks mainly elevated parts as I think that should be how most passengers trains should be separated from the level of freight trains.
14:09 Saga isn’t interested because of two reasons: 1. It would save residents very little time (because they’re much closer to the existing shinkansen lines), but the prefectural government would have to pony up a considerable amount of money (half of the cost of shinkansen lines is borne by governments, and a third of that is paid by the prefecture where rail is built). So why not just have Nagasaki pay for it? They’ll benefit a lot, so that just makes sense, right? 2. When shinkansen lines open, for obvious reasons the standard lines have a significant drop in ridership. In more rural regions-like Saga-the less dense population means that the local routes will become money pits. Standard practice allows the JR company (in this case JR Kyushu) to abandon unprofitable lines. But folks in the region still need to get around, so if service is to be maintained the local government has to take over service-an unprofitable proposition. So, it’s not surprising that Saga isn’t interested.
Accute observation about the Taipei high-speed using the same trains as these. I always felt they were very close (design-wise) to their Japanese cousins. :) A video about the recently set-up and fastly expanding high-speed network in Turkey would also be very interesting. I've lived in Turkey for many years and it's just breathtaking how fast the rail network is expanding both in cities and across the country. Thanks for these great documentaries!
Great vid! Love all the time, footage, and research that goes into these. Failed to mention the Texas Shinkansen project which I am excited about. It would be awesome to see a video on more monorail systems, especially the Walt Disney World Resort monorail, which used to be the most used in the world until recently.
Fun fact. In the event of a big earthquake the safety system apply full brake on all operating trains BEFORE the impact. There's even a video footage of the very moment.
FINALLY! Someone mentions the linearity of Japan as a major factor in it's highspeed railway success. So many just gloss over it or flat out ignore this important fact, that makes a good highspeed rail system so much easier to plan and build. Same goes for the different gauges. People mostly only mention that "japan has a dedicated highspeed network". The economic factors and considerations of building a high-speed network are completely different if you need to build new tracks anyway and simply cannot use existing tracks, as in most of Europe (looking at you German high-speed discussion). That's not to say, that the shinkansen network isn't impressive, on the contrary.
Linearity is not what makes a good high speed rail system and it's a result of geography, not planning. Japan is a long and relatively narrow country and, together with the locations of its major cities a linear alignment is the most logical, as it is in Italy that has similar geography. O the other hand, in a country like Germany, France, Spain or China it makes no sense as it will not provide good connections to the major cities thus will be a horrible system.
@@AL5520 I never said it makes a "good" system, I said It makes things easier. This one should be obvious, since you can connect cities with fewer lines. You can connect the biggest three cities with one line in Japan and you'll get the fastest way possible. In Germany to connect the three biggest cities, Berlin, Hamburg and Munich, you need two lines: Berlin/Hamburg/Munich, and Hamburg/Munich. Adding the Cologne into the mix adds Hamburg/Cologne, Berlin/Cologne, Munich/Cologne to the mix. So a total of five lines for the three biggest cities. France still works with the system because so much is centred around Paris, making the capital a centre of a series of spokes. The same goes for Spain.
There are narrow and standard gauge Shinkansen lines though (narrow gauge Shinkansen have less luggage space and restrictions on luggage size requiring you to buy two tickets if you have more than one bag).
@@watcherzero5256 Sure there are, but those "mini-shinkansen" are limited to 130km/h. There are physical limits at play with how fast you can drive on narrow gauge.
Ah amazing 20 minutes of contents thank you Reece! Will there be an updated video about the German highspeed network as well this year I think due to recent developments there’s a lot of new stuff to add :)
@@SmthPositive_ there are several city pairs where you won't have major problems getting a proper high speed train, and if one is delayed/canceled there'll be more trains just 10mins later or so. The best example is cologne - Frankfurt, it's amazing to travel on the railway!
One of the most things i am exited about my japan vistit is the shinkansen. How else can i travel thousands of kilometers and see so much of the country
I'm kind of sorry for pointing out such an insignificant mistake, but the font you chose for the word shinkansen (新幹線) is not japanese, but likely chinese, which is the default for most fonts. Something like Noto Sans JP would proably not have it. Apart from this trivial detail, great video. Definitely want to try out the tohoku shinkansen if i ever get the opportunity to.
Acrually the Chuo Shinkansen is not planned to go through Kyoto due to geography. The plan is to stop in Nara. This has caused some controversy in Japan.
“When thinking about HSR you might first think of France, Spain or China”!! Really??? Everyone knows that Japan is the most famous country for the HSR.😂😂
Dear RMTransit, I'm very impressed by your knowledge about the Japanese Shinkansen systems. You must have spent a lot of time in researching it. All your points were spot on based on what I've learned from other Japanese railway otaku youtubers.
Er actually the Kyushu Shinkansen did begin service in 2004, from Shin-Yatsushiro to Kagoshima-Chuo. The 2011 date is for the full opening of the line reaching Hakata Station.
Interesting video as always! I only miss information of on board services and a bit more specific info on frequencies and timetabling. And just for fun: the recent movie "Bullet train" also plays on the Tohoku Shinkansen and is based on a Japanese novel which I highly recommend 🙂(only read the novel, didn't watch the movie yet)
Its an excellent movie! I was thinking about including those details but, to some extent they feel like they are better suited to a separate video about the service that I can make IN Japan at some point!
Can you make a video on rural passenger rail? Many rural lines are under pressure or have been abandoned completely, however there are still countries where rural lines do still exist and are viable.
IMO What makes the shinkansen great is that it really is an European InterCity train that just happens to be very fast. For the most part European HSR treats trains like a sort of substitute to flights, with weird boarding processes, complex ticketing systems and so on, which kinda reduces the advantage of convenience of rail travel. Something not mentioned in the video but also worth noting is the larger loading gauge of the shinkansen, that essentially allows an extra row of passengers in a 2+3 seat configuration in 2nd class and 2+2 in 1st, vs 2+2 and 2+1 respectively in European systems. This allows for a much larger capacity for the same train length, which obviously increases the profit margins of running the operations. Shinkansen EMUs are great and I love the platform screens and knowing where exactly in the platform you need to wait for your car, this helps tremendously at the loading speed of passengers. However, although acceleration is great, the ride is quite shaky compared to French locomotive-hauled TGVs. The lack of appropriate areas for large luggage storage is also a bit of an issue that underlines this intercity nature of the trains
What don't like that much on the Shinkansen is the fact that they didn't adopt a similar car bogie used by the French TGV (in which the bogies are also couplers).
74 flights on a random Tuesday between Tokyo (Haneda or Narita) and Osaka (Kansai, Itami or Kobe). 70-110 min flight + 30-60 min ground transport on each end between airport and city center. Between 2h10m and 3h50m (plus connections and airport formalities) for flight options. 220 Shinkansen between Tokyo and Shin-Osaka (Feb 2023 timetable). 2h30m-4h travel time (depending on Nozomi, Hikari or Kodama service). If there wasn't some benefit to getting the flight (such as it being part of an international ticket), the Shinkansen is the better option.
I was in Japan for two weeks on vacation just last year. We used public transportation the entire time and all of our inter-ciry travel was done on the Shinkansen. It's an incredible way to travel. It's such an integral part of Japanese culture now that they totally take it for granted.
I would love to see you do a video on the massive transit projects in Tel Aviv, it’s construction on par with Chinese metros but in a country of just 9 million. I think it would be super interesting to explore!
I'm an American that has lived in Japan for the last 21 years. The Shinkansen is amazing. My family went to Universal Studios in Osaka last year from Japan. If you have a Shinkansen ticket, you get to travel locally with your ticket at your destination. The price per person to Osaka was 130,000 yen, (which now in USD is just under $100). We left Osaka late morning and got home in Tokyo early afternoon. We took the Shinkansen this spring to Yamagata and returned via Sendai. Sadly, there wasn't much to see or do in either city although I was really surprised with the large amount of people and activity in Sendai! Lots of stores and shops around the station. And the people actually seemed friendlier than Tokyo. I don't know of any Shinkansen that leaves every 3 minutes. The Nozomi runs every 20 minutes and the Hikari and Kodama also run together every 20 minutes. This means there is a train every 10 minutes. I normally don't buy a reserved seat because if you're willing to wait, you can wait until the next train when you are first in line. In the cities, the Shinkansen runs on elevated tracks above other local train lines. I saw a video which hypothesized that if the US had high speed rail you could travel to work via the system. That already happens in Japan. Many managers families don't live in Tokyo, they live in Izu or Shizuoka. If you take the Kodama on a Friday night, you will find the train full until these destinations. After that it is empty. Pretty sure Monday morning the same is true. And yes, quality of life is much better there than in Tokyo. Even from Shinagawa in the west, there is an express train which delivers managers to work / home every morning / evening. There is a similar train running north out Ueno. It really is a great system! In over 20 years I have never owned a car. I can get most places by train or bus, if I need a taxi (rare).
When I lived in Tokyo with my uncle, I took Shinkansen to ski resorts. It is amazing how the trains can take you to ski resorts within 2 hours while just sitting down in a comfy chair, drinking or eating, or sleeping, and not worrying about driving home after skiing all day. I love shinkansen man, it's awesome.
You're going to Nagano Prefecture? I live in Yamanashi prefecture and sometimes I go to Nagano area by taking the Shinkansen, that prefecture is good (and near where I live!) to do skiing!!
@@Yamato-tp2kf Yes, I go to Nagano or sometimes the Joetsu area too. I love the Karuizawa Prince Hotel Ski Resort and Gala Yuzawa.
@@Yamato-tp2kf how high is Nagano ? What kind of slopes does the train has to deal with ?
@@Desi365 Mostly only tunnels along the path... There's not much steep slopes for the Shinkansen because Nagano City and Matsumoto are both down in a valley so they are a little high comparing with Tokyo, but not a big altitude...
@@Desi365 There's a gradient of 3% just before arriving at Karuizawa station. You go from 100 meters to 940 meters above sea level within 20 minutes.
Sometimes I feel like shinkansen is basically a high speed metro on the scale of an entire country. Infact many metros have more than 3 min peak hour headway.
It basically acts as one! Its wild!
It’s more expensive than metro, but locals may still use it for commute(if a company pays).
I was blown away by seeing at most 7 mins intervals between high speed trains through the day.
One thing I like about Shinkansen is that non reserved ticket for some services practically function as high speed commuter rail. You don't have to have fixed schedule and the seats in non reserved cars are first come first serve basis. It makes travelling around extremely convenient.
No need for advanced booking, just use applicable JR passes or buy a ticket from the ticket machine, then board the next train you want to.
the downside is that in certain sections and times it's hard to find an empty seat. Also in most cases one can buy the reserved tickets even 10 mins before the departure time. So I never book in advance, just go there and look for the reserved tickets and if it isn't available just take the non-reserved option.
Honestly at this point I'm shocked they don't use a smart card system to tag on-tag off considering just how tight their schedule is, its basically a high speed rail system built to the standards and expectations of metro.
Very confusing which are reserved and which aren't unless you are physically there to look at the platform screens though, and waiting at a station and the next 2 trains are reserved seating only before one comes which has non-reserved cars is annoying.
Only the Tokaido, Sanyo, and Kyushu Shinkansen lines from Tokyo to Kagoshima-Chuo have unreserved seats on all trains. Therefore, it is a good idea to use unreserved seats to travel freely from Tokyo to Kyoto, Osaka, Hiroshima, etc. However, the fastest Shinkansen trains in the Tohoku and Hokuriku regions, such as Tokyo to Kanazawa, Sendai, Morioka, and Hakodate, are all reserved seats, so there is only one train per hour that allows you to travel with unreserved seats only, which is quite inconvenient.
I am Japanese.
This video explains Japanese Shinkansen very well,and I saw a lot of effort in researching and expressing.
Expressing the names of several stations in the name of famous city which is near from the station (like Hakata to Fukuoka) makes the video easy to undertsand for many people.
And I was very surprised at the section of Narita Shinkansen. That proves how hard you research Shinkansen, I think.
I'm glad to hear that foreign people learn about Japanese railway,as a rail fan.
Thank you for posting such a nice video! I would be glad if you could explain about Japanese conventional railways sometime!
No country can run railways to time like Japan. They're amazing, also so clean, and comfortable.
And the most amazing thing is that there are 16 trains in one direction per hour during the busy season. All trains are managed in units of 15 seconds.
Man it's so depressing how impossible it is to have something like this in the US. I know we gotta keep pushing for it but I have my doubts I'll ever ride on a train like this unless I visit another country. I desperately want a high speed rail line from Portland, Ore to Vancouver, BC.
Its not impossible. Just think how impossible it was for Japan or France
@@whattheydidnttellyouwithbr2844 The US is terminally addicted to cars and is unwilling and unable to do anything else. If it happens at all it will be because we are dragged kicking and screaming the whole way. That's not to say that anyone should just give up pushing for it but it's going to take a shift in culture and probably a lot of suffering due to climate change for it to happen.
@@Newspeak. i mean, there several projects in the works right now....
How does building high speed rail in the US help the Military Industrial Complex and the Oil Companies? It doesn't, that's why it is almost impossible to get built.
@@davidbutton3500 lmao it actually does help the military complex
About 16:55. In contrast to Germany, where "It is very much possible to show up to a station 15 minutes AFTER scheduled departure of an intercity train, grab a ticket and then head to the platform and get on board"
Fascinating this can be done. So simply done with just a machine paying with cash or card. I watched John Daub's Only In Japan livestream videos proving you can catch trains in a hurry. T1D Wanderer took a challenge how punctual are local trains in Kansai transferring to another train without leaving so much time in between without missing a train.
lol
@@neubro1448 or you just use DB's Navigator app to buy your tickets, so no machine else needed. On the train, you can even use comfort check-in to not be disturbed by the train crew for ticket control. In Germany, buying tickets for public transit is being limited by at least two minutes before departure, but on long distance trains, they changed it when they abandoned on-board sales of tickets by the stewards. Since then, I think you can even buy your ticket in the app even around 10 minutes after departure. (And frankly spoken, ticket controls on long distance trains are quite rare, I had several rides across the country with no control in several trains.)
In France you buy the tickets days if not weeks before the trip to get the lowest price, it gets canceled because of strikes, and you come the next day at the station after the scheduled departure of your TGV to painstakingly claim your money back.
Iwill be back on the Shinkansen this year and will be riding all the way from Nagasaki aboard JR Kyushu’s new Shinkansen to Sendai via the Tokaido and Tohoku Shinkansen. Japanese High Speed rail is virtually unmatched when you combine efficiency, cleanliness, punctuality and frequency all into one.
What makes it unique compared to Europe is that it operates on completely dedicated high speed track - operating akin to a high speed subway. You can base yourself in one city, say Nagoya, for the duration of your trip and make day trips to Osaka, Tokyo etc.
High speed subway is absolutely a good metaphor!
Just finished my 21 day run having an Airbnb 5 minutes from Shin Osaka. Paid 66k yen for the 21 day pass. I did some calculations to see how much this would have cost. I saved 400k yen ahahahaha. Buy a JR pass folks.
@@RMTransit sorry to bother you, but have you ever considered doing a video on safety on transit systems. It would be a interesting topic as it has become a growing concern in Toronto, Calgary, Edmonton and Ottawa, as well as US and European cities.
That was what really struck me on a 2 week vacation in Tokyo. Whenever I got a little tired of the city, I could travel really quite far on day trips, on a whim, without worrying about missing my train home. Shinkansen service was so frequent that it often felt like a natural extension of the Tokyo metro system. And luckily for me, some stations were randomly located in surprisingly rural places. Presumably to placate local governments. Perfect for exploring some proper Japanese nature.
The Italy high speed rail was pretty awesome, but nothing compares to the Shinkansen! Riding it is a sublime experience.
And then there's the ekiben. No other rail system in the world has anything like and its always a highlight on long trips!
There is no comparison. Shinkansen is by far the best train services. They are fast, always on time and the network is amazing. Well done Japan.
I'm from Spain and although we have a very good system, I think obviously Japan is the king of high speed. You can see the work and dedication in every detail of the system.
I rode the Spanish high speed rail and it was good, but nothing like the precision timing of the Shinkansen. I think the train was based on the German design.
It should not be seen as a completion. Japan and Spain, by all accounts, both have excellent high speed rail systems.
That being said, Spain has a larger land mass, more kilometers of rail, a population less than half of Japan’s, an economy a bit larger than a third of Japan’s, and it started decades later.
Kudos Spain!
u must be kidding me lol
Saudi (with Siemens) and China (CRH) have 350km/h operational speed for YEARS
The king of speed ofc is Siemens and CRH, but japan is King of train integration and facility
Just wanted to say thank you for using kilometers for all your distances and just using the metric system in general. So many English speaking TH-camrs use imperial without even thinking that the rest of the world is in metric
I watched this video while riding the 5hr Nozomi from Shinagawa to Hakata (Fukuoka)! Decided to take the shinkansen instead of a flight despite the longer travel time because there's so much to see out the window to keep me from getting bored, including the magnificent Mt Fuji. I've been living in Japan for over six years now and their technological advancements in every aspect of life still never fails to impress me.
I spent two weeks in Japan a few years ago (Nagoya, then Tokyo, then Kyoto) and was impressed that I never once had want for a car while there. The transit was amazing! I definitely have a goal of going back and riding the Shinkansen end to end
And you can send your luggage to your next hotel ahead of time so you dont have to carry them onto the trains
@@reyjusuf true tho . I went there before
Don't you need buses while in Kyoto?
@@ユニティーちゃん depending on where u go . If u visiting ancient shrines , some attractions can walk within minutes , but some require 20 to 30 minutes walking, if u able to walk then u can walk using the google map , if not can ride the bus from the Kyoto station or other train station in the Kyoto city area to your destination .
I went there about 20 years ago and took trains everywhere, from the shinkansen to slower regional services. Always clean, always on time. A couple of times we got taxis, and they were clean and comfortable as well. No complaints at all.
Originally, Tohoku Shinkansen and Tokaidou Shinkansen was planned to have through service trains. I've seen plans of JNR (National Railroad) from the 1980s for Tokyo station, and it clearly showed tracks 12(now 21), 13(now 22), 14, 15, and 16 connected to both lines, while tracks 17, 18, and 19 being for Tokaidou Shinkansen only. Another cancelled project was Jouetsu Shinkansen's Omiya-Shinjuku section. Originally, Jousetsu Shinkansen was planned to terminate at Shinjuku station. For that reason, there is still a underground space reserved for the Jousetsu Shinkansen at Shinjuku. That is why Toei Shinjuku line is so deep underground at B5F, because Jouetsu Shinkansei's Shinjuku station was planned at B3F. The reason Shinkansen use standard gauge instead of narrow gauge like the rest of Japanese trains is because, when they started planning of the bullet train way back in the 1930s the wanted a train that could eventually do though service with Chousen (Korean) Railroad (which was Japanese territory back then), and Manshu (Manchukuo) Railroad (which was under the control of the Japanese government) which both used standard gauge.
@Zaydan Alfariz in 1939 they had a prototype working to persuade the people of the tech. However WW2 started and they lost. The amazing part is they only started planning the train system again in 1957 and was build and operating before the first Tokyo Olympics in 1964. They also started research on Mag Lev 2 years before completion of the Shinkansen and is only now that it is being built and to be operational in 2027.
A through service from Kagoshima to Hokkaido is simply impossible because both 50Hz and 60Hz AC power are used in Japan. East Japan got their first AC generator from Germany so it's running at 50Hz, while West Japan got theirs from the States so it's running at 60Hz.
This legacy continues to this day and results in Tokaido-Sanyo-Kyushu system running at 25kV 60Hz, while Tohoku-Hokkaido/Joetsu system running at 25kV 50Hz.
The only dual-frequency powered line is Hokuriku Shinkansen. It runs with E7/W7 series EMUs which can adapt the AC supply frequency automatically.
Your stated reasoning for the use of standard gauge on the Shinkansen is wrong. Standard is used because it allows for high speed running. Narrow gauge has less lateral stability than standard. The fastest narrow gauge trains in Japan is the Keisei Skyliner and the former Hakutaka limited express, both of which operate(d) at 160km/h.
"instead of narrow gauge like the rest of Japanese trains "
Not all of Japan's non-shinkansen trains run on narrow gauge.
@Zaydan Alfariz so far ahead they still use fax machines
@@Inspadave That's because those who are in charge (either in politics or in corporations) are the baby boomers (from the showa era generation) that are now starting to retire and they are still stuck in the past and have trouble to get used to the new technologies
The rolling stock really is something else on the network, along with the infrastructure, dozens of long tunnels and massive bridges from city to city that wouldn't look out of place in China linking massive intercity terminals connected to the metro and reigonal rail, its amazing
@Zaydan Alfariz invest in boeing and MCI 🤑
I used to enjoy seeing all the variety of rolling stock the Shinkansen offered back then, coming in all kinds of shapes and colours. Unfortunately, most of them are no longer in use, and it looks like all of the new series are just variations of the N700 series, at least in the southern corridors. It looks like they have finally develop the most efficient train model, cannot blame them.
Yeah, the network gets attention - but, still never enough!
@@kentakiman_gmd performance aspects like top speed is more limited by the infrastructure so the current goal became providing more services and passenger comfort
China? Is this video about China? But I can't see any China, I found only Japan.
I am wondering if you think Japan and China are the same country or if there is a China topic somewhere that I do not understand. If you think China and Japan are the same country, then someone who thinks USA, Canada and Mexico are the same country is also correct.
I didn't expect an intro to the Shinkansen! Amazing video as usual!
Some corrections:
- Along with the New Shuttle, the other compromise JNR made to the protestors of the Omiya to Ueno section of the Tohoku/Joetsu/Hokuriku Shinkansens was the Saikyo Line, which runs alongside the Shinkansen between Akabane and Omiya. The results of this compromise has had... There's no words for how positively impactful Saikyo Line is.
- The steepest section of the Shinkansen is actually on the Hokuriku Shinkansen between Takasaki and Karuizawa, rather than on the mini-Shinkansens. In that section, the max speed is reduced to 210km/h with very little limit increases possible due to limitations of the trains' motors as well as the curviness of the section.
Some additional notes:
- The section between Utsunomiya and Morioka is not necessarily getting a speed limit increase because it has been incredibly difficult to run trains at 360km/h while achieving ideal noise level goals.
- Along with the noise of entering and exiting tunnels, the reason Japan's Shinkansen stock has so much emphasis on aerodynamics is because the pressure (from which the noise results from) of less aerodynamic trains at high speeds entering the tunnel could adversely affect the speed inside the tunnel and durability of the trains.
- On the same topic as the previous point, one of the highest source of drags on high speed trains is the pantograph. Japanese HSR stock has interesting ways to tackle this issue, some of which include the big "fins" mounted on the sides of the trains next to the pantographs.
@Zaydan Alfariz Of course not. Third rail can't reliably deliver power at above 160km/h let alone double the speed.
@Zaydan Alfariz Maglev, or magnetic **levitation**, is very different from third rail. Third rail passes electricity to trains; Maglev tracks create an opposing magnetic field to cause movement.
@Zaydan Alfariz Doesn't matter; Maglev is not third rail. Totally different technologies. For the physical definition, you're confounding two sides (electricity and magnetism) of Maxwell's equation as the same thing, when they're not.
On the speed restriction on Hokuriku Shinkansen, it is actually the downhill direction where speed is restricted to 210 km/h. This is to retain sufficient braking power in case of emergency. E7 series can do 260km/h at the uphill direct. EMU trains are generally better at handling steeper gradients and successive speed-ups and slow-downs.
On increasing the speed of Tohoku Shinkansen, Fastech 360 concluded that, as long as the standard Shinkansen was coupled with the mini-Shinkansen, the noise would be beyond the legal requirement. Therefore, ALFA-X set out to find a feasible design to achieve 360km/h when it is running on its own. The experiment is still ongoing. 360km/h needed to be achieved or the Hokkaido Shinkansen business plan (Connecting Sapporo with Tokyo in 4 hours) will not stand. Actually, the fastest Hayabusa services to Hakodate do not couple with Komachi at Morioka hints the service pattern when Hokkaido Shinkansen is extended to Sapporo in the future.
JR Central's _shinkansen_ rolling stock mount their pantographs on big humps on the car's roof & I thought its to house electrical equipment, since being a multiple unit without a locomotive, space must have been more at a premium. That was until I saw newer JR East rolling stock (E5 onwards) that did away with the hump but partially concealed the pantograph with roof-mounted fins
Brilliant summary and analysis of Japan's amazing Shinkansen network, not only has there never been a fatality on the network but this is a country famous for the frequency and magnitude of its' earthquakes. An amazing achievement.
Went to Japan for the first time a couple of weeks ago and loved the Shinkansen. It's all separate in the stations (2nd gateline), loads of legroom and fast and on time. One thing that wasn't mentioned was the sheer fame of the "bullet train". The normal man on the street knows about it, and I've been asked several times "did you go on the bullet train"...
Great job on this one! You even pronounced the Japanese city names very well. So many other Norh American TH-cam presenters mumble and stumble when saying foreign city names. You obviously made the effort to learn the correct names. Well done!
RM transit and Nonstop Eurotrip are the ultimate crossover.
🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻
Incredible - there has never been a single loss of life on the Shinkansen in close to 60 years of service!!
no. Fatal accidents due to system trouble have not yet occurred, but accidents resulting in injury (suicide by suicide) occur frequently.
Not counting suicides, there's been a number of deaths caused by the Shinkansen network:
Someone got caught in a door and crushed to death.
That's it.
... What? One is a number!
日本語でごめんなさい。私の気持ちを英語で表現するには、私の英語力が足りません。
日本の「新幹線」について、とても丁寧で正確な説明をしてくださり、私は心から感謝いたします。
日本以外の国からいらした皆さんが、新幹線での旅を楽しんでいただけたら、私はとてもうれしいです。
ちなみに、私は上越新幹線の沿線に住んでいます。
I got to ride Shinkansen from Nagoya to Tokyo a few years ago.
What a smooth ride it was
I live in Sapporo, recently there was an event promoting local rail and the Shinkansen extension. They set up a mini H5 Hayabusa loop toddlers could ride on, so cute 😭
IMO JR Hokkaido don't have the money to build the remaining Shinkansen section to Sapporo while maintaining services to remote parts of Hokkaido at the same time.
Another key but less flashy project JR East is working on is the Fukushima Station Approach Line--currently the connecting track between the Tohoku and Yamagata Shinkansen lines at Fukushima Station is single-tracked, branching off from the northbound local track. This means southbound trains from Yamagata stop on the northbound platform, then have to cross over the northbound tracks to get back on the Tohoku line (and the southbound Tohoku train it gets coupled with also has to cross over the tracks twice), which is a big operational bottleneck for a station that has trains passing or stopping every ~2 minutes in peak periods. They're currently building a second connecting track that will pass under the existing Tohoku Shinkansen tracks and allow southbound trains to merge directly onto the local southbound track with no grade crossings. The project started construction in 2021 and is expected to finish in 2026.
Good point! The Fukushima Approach Line is important in speeding up the Yamagata Shinkansen and also removing the single track bottleneck and crossing the main line :)
Just popped up into my notifications, already know it's gonna be good.
I hope it was!
I'm always fascinated how the Hayabusa service (E5) and the Komachi (E6) couple and uncouple at Morioka. It's so exciting to see the trains separate and join.
Actually, they detach at Morioka Station. The Akita Shinkansen "mini" line goes from Morioka to Akita.
Did you mean Morioka? Coming from Tokyo, Komachi E6 is uncoupled in Morioka and travels on to Akita and back from there. As far as I'm aware only E5/H5 sets travel to Aomori and onward. But yes, never gets boring to watch.
@@volkernock5573 Ah yes Morioka HAHAHA I got confused🤣
Something relaxing about watching trains split and combine!
@@RMTransit yes, probably the most famous (and most photographed) train "kiss" in the world
6:53 man this train Comming too india 😍I'm so excited i love this design so much ! It looks so cool and reliable!
I loved this! The Shinkansen network is so cool
I didn't take the deutsche bahn so I'm early.
@Sega-16Actually, SNCF is fine compared to the mess of European railway operators.
Amtrak: Hold my beer!
In India you'd come late whether u take a train or not 🤣🤣🤣
@Zaydan Alfariz yea but unfortunately that's not true for most trains in general in India
Many will miss out on this great vid since their train has been canceled 3 minutes before departure
In India we are developing high speed rail with the help of Japan . Soon we will also be able to experience this amazing train or something similar to it. Thanks Japan 🙂
I rode the Hokuriku shinkansen in 2019 - days after a flood closed it and their main maintenance yard, mind you. It's an exceptional rail system and you've covered it well!
You have made me positive about the future of Toronto transit in general which is a big reversal for me. I also appreciate the international context, high quality, thoughtfulness, and positivity of your content. Please keep it up!
Finally, I was waiting for you to cover Shinkansen for so long.
I hope you enjoyed!
The Shinkansen is simply amazing! I am rather tall (2.05 meters), yet I had ample leg room in the Shinkansen (using economy class), my legs didn't even nearly touch the seat in front of me! When riding trains in Germany (my home), I need one seat to sit at and another one, where I can use the leg room.
Also, the puntuality is simply out of this world. I had finished my business earlier than expected and was asking in the service center, whether I could take an earlier train. The lady told me the next one arrives in a couple of seconds (can't recall the exact number), and printed me a new ticket, I went straight to the platform, and the train pulled into the station, just as I reached the top of the escalators leading to the platform. In Germany, not only would it have taken forever to be served at the service point (where they'd probably even be unaware whether trains were running today or not), the punctuality is so unrealiable, that it'd be a long wait regardless (in Germany, a high speed train with less than six minutes counts as punctual, try being six minutes late to a job interview, and see, whether they'd accept that standard of punctuality).
Though Germans love to complain about Deutsche Bahn and its punctuality. I have lived in Germany and I hold a fair share of grudges about your country, however your train system is still really, really good compared to the rest of the world. With the 9-euro-ticket I was able to travel from Berlin to Munich and back for only 9 euros. It was a long ride as they were Nahverkehr trains, but still! For that price it was absolutely amazing! Hope you make that permanent. Here where I am (we're like 4 times bigger than Germany), even having a metro system in the 9 million capital city still sounds like a dream.
@@driss3946 it'll be for 49€ per month starting in May, so still much better for regular users, but not as good for one time riders
As an American: Imagine an intercity train that is only 6 minutes late. Wow.
@@Skip6235 Well, only 65% of trains arrived within that 6 minute margin, meaning 35% of trains arrived later than that, possibly hours later. Also, cancelled trains aren't included in this statistic.
This channel is igniting my undiscovered obsession with high speed rails . Also excited to see the Tohoku Shinkansen run in India altho its probably going to be in 3-4 years!
Affordable high speed rail is the future, car centric cities are hell to live in
As a person who likes to make videos about trains in the Netherlands, I really hope that we will once build a high-speed line to Germany. hsl south is not enough for my enthousiasm. maybe I'll go to Japan someday because who doesn't like bullet trains? As always, i enjoyed your video so thank you!
The thing right now is we dont have a real need for highspees rail. Our country is very small remember that. In return we do have the best bike/road infrastructure so its a trade off i will take. Would be nice to see more High speed lines going to outside places.
You mean building a High Speed line on Hollandstrecke Köln Duisburg/Dortmund-Mülheim Styrum Oberhausen Emmerich am Rhein Zevenaar Arnhem Utrecht International section and domestic Dutch side Spoorlijn Amsterdam Centraal Utrecht. When it comes to high-speed line towards Germany from the Netherlands these trains need to support 15kv 16.7hz Deutsche Bahn Netze 25kv 50hz Netherlands outside of the high speed line if built 1.5kv DC future 3kv DC
@@EpicThe112 Are you driverwoods?
Once there was a consideration to build a line from Amsterdam to cologne I think, but it was scrapped unfortunately
You should go, there is nothing like it!
Took one from Ueno to Omiya, just to see the JR Rail Museum. Totally worth it.
In Texas US, there is a project to build a high speed rail line from Dallas to Houston, and they said that they would be using rolling stock adapted from those used on the Shinkansen. Unfortunately, that project seems to have stagnated after legal difficulties acquiring the alignment. They currently own the whole alignment, but are in great debt and there's been no update for a very long time.
Edit: Or maybe they don't actually own all the land yet, but they do have the legal right to use eminent domain... after making it to the Texas Supreme Court
3min intervals on Tokaido between Bullet trains on Golden Week is a marvel even more than speed.
Just ordered our JR Pass today for our visit late August. Cant wait.
Thanks Reece. Well done. I laughed when you said the mini Shinkansen reminded you of bulbous British stock. As you would know, the loading gauge for most narrow gauge lines in Japan is actually wider than the restrictive clearance required on British standard gauge.
I accidentally got on the Kodama instead of the Hikari 😂 boy did I stop at EVERY station from Kyoto to Tokyo
Hey there!
Hope you doing fine,
Thanks for the great content and for inspiring me on creating a video explaining why Japan is INSANELLY well designed.
Wish you the very best!
I actually live along where the new maglev line is going to be opened, and last I checked we'll actually have full operation between Tokyo and Nagoya starting in 4 years which is super exciting! Residents can also actually ride the test runs too which is really cool. It's on a lottery system though and it's of course very popular so it is a tad difficult to get into
Great video. An important one for the channel. Thanks for explaining the reason for the long pointy noses. I had assumed it was just due to general wind-tunnel testing, but the tunnel noise reason explains why we haven't seen designs like that in other countries.
Other countries extend the tunnel mouth with a concrete structure with holes similar to a muzzle break which dissipates the pressure noiselessly.
Been wanting this... My favourite High speed rail of all time.
Hope to seeing the high speed rail becoming a reality in 🇮🇳.
Also, can't wait for Chuo Shinkansen as well.
Also, I read somewhere that America's working on getting their their own Maglev lines once the Chuo Shinkansen is operational.
I remember once taking the Shinkansen from Kagoshima at the very bottom of Kyushu to Osaka because a hurricane cancelled my flight. I actually outran the hurricane and got to experience it twice.
What an adventure that would have been.
Well explained video! It's very amazing to see how Japan's high speed railway have upped their level to compete and be way ahead of other high speed trains in other countries
I'm Japanese.
I'm grateful that you've introduced Japan's Shinkansen to people all over the world.
I was surprised to see how well you've researched Japan's unique circumstances, such as the fact that the track width is different from that of conventional lines, unlike in Europe.
I look forward to watching your future videos.
What isn’t mentioned is that it’s mega-reliable - the Tohoku Shinkansen averages 30 seconds lateness over a YEAR. No other country comes close. However, it is also very expensive which is why air travel even over shorter distances is still popular.
Not to mention, the country has the population to support both options sustainably (despite being in decline)
Unless it snows... then we had the shitshow we had the last 2 weeks lol.
This was a really nice analysis!
Time to watch again to take notes
Japan’s Shinkansen was the worlds first and greatest high speed rail.
Wow, what gorgeous machines on such gorgeous infrastructure
Love the videos man, keep up the great work
As a Japanese, I think the Shinkansen is very convenient. I took her to Tokyo a while ago. Sorry for my bad English.
Shinkansen videos are great.
This kind of video keep me coming back. Nice video and thanks for the hard work!
Thank you so much for sharing Japanese bullet trains!! I am quite proud of your sharing Japanese bullets trains! I think they are the best trains on the world. I am looking forward to watching your chanel regarding Japanese trains from now on!
I've ridden high speed rail in both Spain and Japan. I loved Spain and the Renfe is solid infrastructure, but the Shinkansen is next level! And if they get a 500 kph line working that will be astounding! I'm definitely rooting for them!
"When you think of high-speed trains, you might think of France or Spain". No dude, everyone thinks of Japan 😉
Using the Japan Rail Pass , I had taken Shinkansen for
5 min ride and also southern Hokkaido to Tokyo ( 4 hours ).
The Shinkansen is simply amazing. I've been traveling to Japan for over 20 years now but riding the Shinkansen never gets old. The Green-sha is so nice. The whole network is amazing. You can walk from your house, get on a commuter line, get Tokyo station, and from there with some stops, you can get to Kyushu. That's simply amazing. Oh and on-time too, every time.
That was great Reece. Excellent as always. However, as it first opened in 1964, while you never mentioned it, while these is an Earthquake warning system, I assume there is also a Godzilla warning system. He was quite prolific then and I’m sure they made some allowance for this.
Excellent video!
Very nice video! I live in Japan. I am glad that I can feel so many wonderful things about Shinkansen from your video😊
14:34 a slight mistake on the Chuō Shinkansen. It'll go through Nara and Osaka, not Kyōto.
Very many thanks for this - I hadn't realised how much I didn't know about Japan's high-speed railways !
Some of the Shinkansen lines just blow my mind with how different the transportation priorities are there compared to North America. Connecting all the way up to Hokkaido and all the way down to Kyushu with additional branches is mindboggling. Imagine if the Northeast Corridor in the US was true HSR and extended all the way up to Portland, Maine and all the way down to the Research Triangle in North Carolina, with additional branches to places like Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania and Norfolk, Virginia. And even that's kind of underselling the Shinkansen given the tremendous geographical challenges in Japan.
Oh I hope to ride it one day. Love to do a video about the Shinkansen.
🚄 🚅
Also love that it’s in its own tracks mainly elevated parts as I think that should be how most passengers trains should be separated from the level of freight trains.
14:09 Saga isn’t interested because of two reasons:
1. It would save residents very little time (because they’re much closer to the existing shinkansen lines), but the prefectural government would have to pony up a considerable amount of money (half of the cost of shinkansen lines is borne by governments, and a third of that is paid by the prefecture where rail is built). So why not just have Nagasaki pay for it? They’ll benefit a lot, so that just makes sense, right?
2. When shinkansen lines open, for obvious reasons the standard lines have a significant drop in ridership. In more rural regions-like Saga-the less dense population means that the local routes will become money pits. Standard practice allows the JR company (in this case JR Kyushu) to abandon unprofitable lines. But folks in the region still need to get around, so if service is to be maintained the local government has to take over service-an unprofitable proposition.
So, it’s not surprising that Saga isn’t interested.
Great video, Great content
Accute observation about the Taipei high-speed using the same trains as these. I always felt they were very close (design-wise) to their Japanese cousins. :) A video about the recently set-up and fastly expanding high-speed network in Turkey would also be very interesting. I've lived in Turkey for many years and it's just breathtaking how fast the rail network is expanding both in cities and across the country. Thanks for these great documentaries!
Great vid! Love all the time, footage, and research that goes into these. Failed to mention the Texas Shinkansen project which I am excited about. It would be awesome to see a video on more monorail systems, especially the Walt Disney World Resort monorail, which used to be the most used in the world until recently.
E/W7s are the most gorgeous trains on the planet. The Gran class seats are to die for.
I though this video was very well done. Thanks Reece!
Thanks for watching!
Fun fact. In the event of a big earthquake the safety system apply full brake on all operating trains BEFORE the impact. There's even a video footage of the very moment.
Can't wait to see Shinkansen hitting Indian tracks. 🇮🇳
FINALLY! Someone mentions the linearity of Japan as a major factor in it's highspeed railway success. So many just gloss over it or flat out ignore this important fact, that makes a good highspeed rail system so much easier to plan and build.
Same goes for the different gauges. People mostly only mention that "japan has a dedicated highspeed network". The economic factors and considerations of building a high-speed network are completely different if you need to build new tracks anyway and simply cannot use existing tracks, as in most of Europe (looking at you German high-speed discussion).
That's not to say, that the shinkansen network isn't impressive, on the contrary.
just draw lines between the major cities
Linearity is not what makes a good high speed rail system and it's a result of geography, not planning. Japan is a long and relatively narrow country and, together with the locations of its major cities a linear alignment is the most logical, as it is in Italy that has similar geography. O the other hand, in a country like Germany, France, Spain or China it makes no sense as it will not provide good connections to the major cities thus will be a horrible system.
@@AL5520 I never said it makes a "good" system, I said It makes things easier. This one should be obvious, since you can connect cities with fewer lines.
You can connect the biggest three cities with one line in Japan and you'll get the fastest way possible. In Germany to connect the three biggest cities, Berlin, Hamburg and Munich, you need two lines: Berlin/Hamburg/Munich, and Hamburg/Munich.
Adding the Cologne into the mix adds Hamburg/Cologne, Berlin/Cologne, Munich/Cologne to the mix. So a total of five lines for the three biggest cities.
France still works with the system because so much is centred around Paris, making the capital a centre of a series of spokes. The same goes for Spain.
There are narrow and standard gauge Shinkansen lines though (narrow gauge Shinkansen have less luggage space and restrictions on luggage size requiring you to buy two tickets if you have more than one bag).
@@watcherzero5256 Sure there are, but those "mini-shinkansen" are limited to 130km/h. There are physical limits at play with how fast you can drive on narrow gauge.
Having been in Japan very recently, I can vouch for the Shinkansen. Best train ride you'll ever take..
Ah amazing 20 minutes of contents thank you Reece! Will there be an updated video about the German highspeed network as well this year I think due to recent developments there’s a lot of new stuff to add :)
@Zaydan Alfariz should’ve a added a “theoretical” before the “highspeed”
@@SmthPositive_ there are several city pairs where you won't have major problems getting a proper high speed train, and if one is delayed/canceled there'll be more trains just 10mins later or so. The best example is cologne - Frankfurt, it's amazing to travel on the railway!
@@jan-lukas I think 10 minutes is a bit of a stretch especially since there’s more destinations in Germany and abroad one might want to travel to 😅
Thats the plan!
@@RMTransit sick can’t wait for all the new videos this year!
One of the most things i am exited about my japan vistit is the shinkansen. How else can i travel thousands of kilometers and see so much of the country
I'm kind of sorry for pointing out such an insignificant mistake, but the font you chose for the word shinkansen (新幹線) is not japanese, but likely chinese, which is the default for most fonts. Something like Noto Sans JP would proably not have it.
Apart from this trivial detail, great video. Definitely want to try out the tohoku shinkansen if i ever get the opportunity to.
Yeah the stroke order position is Chinese rather than Japanese.
Acrually the Chuo Shinkansen is not planned to go through Kyoto due to geography. The plan is to stop in Nara. This has caused some controversy in Japan.
“When thinking about HSR you might first think of France, Spain or China”!! Really??? Everyone knows that Japan is the most famous country for the HSR.😂😂
Dear RMTransit, I'm very impressed by your knowledge about the Japanese Shinkansen systems. You must have spent a lot of time in researching it. All your points were spot on based on what I've learned from other Japanese railway otaku youtubers.
Er actually the Kyushu Shinkansen did begin service in 2004, from Shin-Yatsushiro to Kagoshima-Chuo. The 2011 date is for the full opening of the line reaching Hakata Station.
@@arkynkueh You are absolutely right. I've edited out the "Opened in 2011" part from my comment. Thanks!
I don't think anyone thinks of China or France first when they think of HSR. When people say HSR, Japan automatically pops in my head.
Interesting video as always! I only miss information of on board services and a bit more specific info on frequencies and timetabling.
And just for fun: the recent movie "Bullet train" also plays on the Tohoku Shinkansen and is based on a Japanese novel which I highly recommend 🙂(only read the novel, didn't watch the movie yet)
Its an excellent movie! I was thinking about including those details but, to some extent they feel like they are better suited to a separate video about the service that I can make IN Japan at some point!
Can you make a video on rural passenger rail? Many rural lines are under pressure or have been abandoned completely, however there are still countries where rural lines do still exist and are viable.
IMO What makes the shinkansen great is that it really is an European InterCity train that just happens to be very fast. For the most part European HSR treats trains like a sort of substitute to flights, with weird boarding processes, complex ticketing systems and so on, which kinda reduces the advantage of convenience of rail travel.
Something not mentioned in the video but also worth noting is the larger loading gauge of the shinkansen, that essentially allows an extra row of passengers in a 2+3 seat configuration in 2nd class and 2+2 in 1st, vs 2+2 and 2+1 respectively in European systems. This allows for a much larger capacity for the same train length, which obviously increases the profit margins of running the operations.
Shinkansen EMUs are great and I love the platform screens and knowing where exactly in the platform you need to wait for your car, this helps tremendously at the loading speed of passengers. However, although acceleration is great, the ride is quite shaky compared to French locomotive-hauled TGVs. The lack of appropriate areas for large luggage storage is also a bit of an issue that underlines this intercity nature of the trains
What don't like that much on the Shinkansen is the fact that they didn't adopt a similar car bogie used by the French TGV (in which the bogies are also couplers).
74 flights on a random Tuesday between Tokyo (Haneda or Narita) and Osaka (Kansai, Itami or Kobe). 70-110 min flight + 30-60 min ground transport on each end between airport and city center. Between 2h10m and 3h50m (plus connections and airport formalities) for flight options.
220 Shinkansen between Tokyo and Shin-Osaka (Feb 2023 timetable). 2h30m-4h travel time (depending on Nozomi, Hikari or Kodama service).
If there wasn't some benefit to getting the flight (such as it being part of an international ticket), the Shinkansen is the better option.
Thankfully there exist a few travel vlogs that explore this idea; a video by "Paolo from Tokyo" comes to mind.
I rode the shinkansen on my trip there and it was simply amazing how puntual it was and all the options there were
I LOVE how if I ever wanna know more ab a transit system, i can always count on reese to explain it fully 👍
Japanese Shinkansen is truly the standard for high speed trains.
I was in Japan for two weeks on vacation just last year.
We used public transportation the entire time and all of our inter-ciry travel was done on the Shinkansen.
It's an incredible way to travel. It's such an integral part of Japanese culture now that they totally take it for granted.
I would love to see you do a video on the massive transit projects in Tel Aviv, it’s construction on par with Chinese metros but in a country of just 9 million. I think it would be super interesting to explore!
I'm an American that has lived in Japan for the last 21 years. The Shinkansen is amazing. My family went to Universal Studios in Osaka last year from Japan. If you have a Shinkansen ticket, you get to travel locally with your ticket at your destination. The price per person to Osaka was 130,000 yen, (which now in USD is just under $100). We left Osaka late morning and got home in Tokyo early afternoon.
We took the Shinkansen this spring to Yamagata and returned via Sendai. Sadly, there wasn't much to see or do in either city although I was really surprised with the large amount of people and activity in Sendai! Lots of stores and shops around the station. And the people actually seemed friendlier than Tokyo.
I don't know of any Shinkansen that leaves every 3 minutes. The Nozomi runs every 20 minutes and the Hikari and Kodama also run together every 20 minutes. This means there is a train every 10 minutes. I normally don't buy a reserved seat because if you're willing to wait, you can wait until the next train when you are first in line.
In the cities, the Shinkansen runs on elevated tracks above other local train lines.
I saw a video which hypothesized that if the US had high speed rail you could travel to work via the system. That already happens in Japan. Many managers families don't live in Tokyo, they live in Izu or Shizuoka. If you take the Kodama on a Friday night, you will find the train full until these destinations. After that it is empty. Pretty sure Monday morning the same is true. And yes, quality of life is much better there than in Tokyo. Even from Shinagawa in the west, there is an express train which delivers managers to work / home every morning / evening. There is a similar train running north out Ueno. It really is a great system! In over 20 years I have never owned a car. I can get most places by train or bus, if I need a taxi (rare).
I asked my guide in Tokyo how long his commute was and he said two hours by rail each way! Didnt seem worth it to me for a six hour shift.