Class 1000 Shinkansen
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| Class 1000 | |
|---|---|
Class 1000 Shinkansen set A | |
| In service | 1962–1976 |
| Manufacturers | |
| Constructed | 1961–1962 |
| Scrapped | 1975–1976 |
| Number built | 6 vehicles (2 sets) |
| Number preserved | 0 |
| Formation | 2 or 4 cars per trainset |
| Fleet numbers | A/B set |
| Operator | Japanese National Railways |
| Specifications | |
| Car body construction | Steel |
| Car length | 25 m (82 ft)[1] |
| Width | 3.38 m (11 ft 1 in) |
| Doors | 2 externally opening sliding doors per side |
| Electric system | Overhead line, 25 kV 60 Hz AC |
| Current collection | Pantograph |
| Track gauge | 1,435 mm (4 ft 8+1⁄2 in) standard gauge |
Class 1000 (Japanese: 1000形) was the classification given to the two prototype Japanese Shinkansen trains built for high-speed testing ahead of the opening of the Tōkaidō Shinkansen in 1964.[1]
Set A
- 1001 (Mc) built by Kisha Seizo, seating capacity 56 (actual 16), DT9002 bogies
- 1002 (MDc) built by Nippon Sharyo, seating capacity 80, DT9001 bogies
Set B
- 1003 (Mc) built by Hitachi, seating capacity 70, DT9006 bogies
- 1004 (MD) built by Hitachi, seating capacity 100, DT9004 bogies
- 1005 (M) built by Kawasaki Sharyo, seating capacity 80, DT9005 bogies
- 1006 (MDc) built by Kinki Sharyo, seating capacity 80, DT9003 bogies
Construction
All vehicles were of welded steel construction, and had rounded cab windows except for car 1006 which had an angular design which was ultimately used on the production 0 series vehicles. Due to differing vehicle construction, car 1004 in set B had unusual elongated hexagonal windows. Among the features not continued on the production 0 series units were externally sliding doors, and a translucent nose section illuminated from inside by fifteen 20 W fluorescent tubes. Cars 1002, 1004 and 1006 were fitted with auxiliary pantographs adjacent to the main pantographs.[1]