STAR21

Class 952/953 "STAR21"

Preserved cars 953-5 and 953-1 at Sendai Shinkansen Depot, July 2009
In service 19921998
Manufacturer Hitachi, Kawasaki Heavy Industries, Nippon Sharyo
Constructed 1992
Scrapped 1998
Number built 9 vehicles
Number in service None
Number preserved 3 vehicles
Number scrapped 6 vehicles
Formation 9 cars
Fleet numbers S5
Operator(s) JR East
Line(s) served Tohoku Shinkansen, Joetsu Shinkansen
Specifications
Car body construction Aluminium alloy
Width 3,100 mm (10 ft 2 in)
Maximum speed 350 km/h (217 mph) (nominal)
Electric system(s) 25 kV AC, 50 Hz
Current collection method Overhead catenary
Track gauge 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 12 in)

"STAR21" was the name given to the Class 952/953 (952・953形) 9-car experimental Shinkansen train developed in 1992 by the East Japan Railway Company (JR East) in Japan to test technology to be incorporated in next-generation shinkansen trains operating at speeds of 350 km/h (217 mph) or higher.[1] The name was an acronym for "Superior Train for the Advanced Railway toward the 21st Century".[2]

Design

The train consisted of nine cars arranged in two distinct "halves", with the Class 952 half-set consisting of four separate vehicles, and the Class 953 half-set consisting of five articulated vehicles using shared bogies.[2][3]

Three different construction methods were used for the vehicle bodies. Cars 1 to 3 used welded hollow aluminium extrusions, cars 4 to 5 used brazed aluminium honeycomb panels, and cars 6 to 9 used an aircraft-style Duralumin fuselage construction.[1]

The front-end design of the two driving vehicles (952-1 and 953-5) were slightly different, although both used a wedge-shaped profile with little lateral taper.[3]

The external livery was light green for the Class 952 cars (including half of car 953-1), "snow" grey for cars 953-1 to 953-3, and beige for cars 953-3 to 953-5, with a light blue window band throughout the length of the train.[2]

Internally, cars were fitted with passengers seats, arranged 2+2 abreast for standard class cars, and 2+1 abreast for the Green car (952-4).[2] Five different types of lightweight seating design were tested.[3]

Formation

The set, designated S5, was initially formed as follows with some cars unpowered.[4][5]

Car No. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
Designation Tc M M' Ts T M M' M M'c
Numbering 952-1 952-2 952-3 952-4 953-1 953-2 953-3 953-4 953-5
Seating capacity 56 63 72 34 56 48 48 48 46
Weight (t) 30.0 29.9 33.2 25.5 19.4 20.7 21.4 20.4 27.0
Vehicle length (mm) 26,250 25,000 25,000 25,000 22,250 18,500 18,500 18,500 25,500

Cars 1 to 3 were built by Nippon Sharyo, cars 4 to 5 were built by Hitachi, and cars 6 to 8 were built by Kawasaki Heavy Industries.[4]

Cars 3 and 7 were fitted with pantographs.[1]

History

Sticker on the side of 953-5 commemorating the national speed record of 425.0 km/h

The train was delivered in March 1992,[3] and unveiled to the press on 2 April.[6]

On 30 October 1992, the train recorded a Japanese national speed record of 353.0 km/h (219.3 mph) on the Jōetsu Shinkansen between Urasa and Niigata, surpassing the record previously set by JR West's "WIN350" experimental train in August of the same year. On 1 November 1992, the record was raised to 358.0 km/h (222.5 mph) between Tsubame-Sanjō and Niigata.[6]

In 1993, the train was modified with the addition of motors to all axles, increasing its overall rating to 4,620 kW (6,200 hp).[3]

On 13 December 1993, the train reached 400 km/h (248.5 mph), and on 21 December recorded a Japanese national speed record of 425.0 km/h (264.1 mph) on the Jōetsu Shinkansen between Tsubame-Sanjō and Niigata. This record stood until it was broken by JR Central's "300X" experimental train in July 1996.[6]

The STAR21 trainset was officially withdrawn on 17 February 1998.[1][4]

Preservation

End car 952-1 is preserved outdoors at the RTRI large-scale wind tunnel test facility in Maibara, Shiga, first displayed to the public on 10 October 1998.[6] Cars 953-1 and 953-5 are preserved at Sendai Shinkansen Depot.[7] A DT9035B bogie from the train was donated in June 1998 by Sumitomo Metal Industries to the Nara National College of Technology in Nara, where it is kept on display.[8]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 プロトタイプの世界 - Prototype World. Japan: Kōtsū Shimbunsha. December 2005. pp. 52–55. OCLC 170056962.
  2. 1 2 3 4 日本と世界の鉄道カタログ [Japan and World Railway Catalogue]. Japan: Seibido Publishing. July 1992. pp. 36–39. ISBN 4-415-03262-1.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 Semmens, Peter (1997). High Speed in Japan: Shinkansen - The World's Busiest High-speed Railway. Sheffield, UK: Platform 5 Publishing. ISBN 1-872524-88-5.
  4. 1 2 3 新幹線電車データブック2011 [Shinkansen Databook 2011]. Japan: JRR. March 2011. p. 95. ISBN 978-4-330-19811-8.
  5. JR全車輛ハンドブック'93 [JR Rolling Stock Handbook 1993]. Japan: Neko Publishing. 1993.
  6. 1 2 3 4 Yamanouchi, Shūichirō (2002). 東北・上越新幹線 [Tōhoku & Jōetsu Shinkansen]. Tokyo, Japan: JTB Can Books. ISBN 4-533-04513-8.
  7. 鉄道のテクノロジーVol1:新幹線 [Railway Technology Vol.1: Shinkansen]. Japan: Sanei Mook. April 2009. p. 122. ISBN 978-4-7796-0534-5.
  8. Kobatake, Koji (1998). 日本最速新幹線の台車 [Japan's fastest shinkansen bogie]. 1998 Topics (in Japanese). Nara, Japan: Nara National College of Technology. Retrieved 2 June 2012.

Further reading

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