A record: Japan’s maglev train zooms at 603 kph
Tokyo, April 21
Japan’s state-of-the-art maglev train clocked a new world speed record Tuesday in a test run near Mount Fuji, smashing through the 600 km per hour mark, as Tokyo races to sell the technology abroad.
The seven-car maglev train — short for “magnetic levitation” — hit a top speed of 603 kilometres an hour, and managed nearly 11 seconds at over 600kph, operator Central Japan Railway said.
The new record came less than a week after the company recorded a top speed of 590 kph, breaking its own 2003 record of 581 kph.
The maglev hovers 10 cm above the tracks and is propelled by electrically charged magnets. About two hundred train buffs gathered for today’s record-setting run, with the crowd cheering as the train broke through 600 kph.
An AFP reporter who previously rode on the super-speed train said the experience was like taking off in a plane, with the feeling of g-force gathering as the speedometer is pushed ever higher.
“The faster the train runs, the more stable it becomes—I think the quality of the train ride has improved,” Yasukazu Endo, who heads the maglev test centre southwest of Tokyo, told reporters today.
By 2045, maglev trains are expected to link Tokyo and Osaka in just one hour and seven minutes, slashing the journey time in half. — AFP