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词条 Fuji (train)
释义

  1. Route

  2. History

     Pre-World War II  Post-World War II 

  3. Rolling stock

  4. See also

  5. References

  6. External links

{{italic title}}{{Infobox rail service
| name = Fuji
| image = JNR-EF66-53-for-Fuji.jpg
| image_width = 300px
| caption = Fuji service hauled by EF66 locomotive, June 2004
| type = Limited express
| status =
| locale = Tokaido Main Line, Sanyo Main Line, Nippo Main Line
| predecessor =
| first = 1929
| last = March 2009
| successor =
| operator = JR Kyushu
| formeroperator=
| ridership =
| start = {{STN|Tokyo}}
| stops =
| end = {{STN|Ōita}}
| distance =
| journeytime =
| frequency =
| trainnumber =
| class =
| access =
| seating =
| catering =
| stock = 14 series sleeper coaches
| gauge = {{RailGauge|1067mm|lk=on}}
| el =
| speed = {{Convert|110|km/h|mph|round=5|abbr=on}}[1]
| owners =
| routenumber =
| map =
| map_state =
}}

The {{Nihongo|Fuji|富士}} was a sleeper train that formerly operated between Tokyo and Ōita in Japan. Operated by the Kyushu Railway Company (JR Kyushu) and classified as a limited express service, it was discontinued from the start of the revised timetable on 14 March 2009.[2]

Route

The train was coupled with the Hayabusa sleeper between Tokyo and Moji Station. The Hayabusa separated at Moji and continued to Hakata and Kumamoto.

The 1,240 km Tokyo-Ōita run took just over seventeen hours, leaving Tokyo at 18:03 and arriving in Ōita at 11:17. The return service left Ōita at 16:48 and arrived in Tokyo at 09:58.[1]

History

Pre-World War II

The Fuji began as a long-distance daytime service in 1912, although the train did not receive a name until September 1929.[2] It was one of two long-distance services on the Tōkaidō-Sanyō corridor. The other train on the route, named Sakura, was aimed at middle-class travelers, while Fuji had higher-class rooms, dining cars serving Western food and a "Momoyama" observation car. Fuji and Sakura were the first named trains in Japan.

Fuji services originally operated between Tokyo and Shimonoseki Station. Connecting ferries were available from Shimonoseki to Pusan, Korea, from which passengers could connect to train services bound for China, Russia, and even Europe. In November 1942, service was extended to Nagasaki,[2] from where ferries were available to Shanghai.

Fuji services were suspended in April 1944 due to Japan's deteriorating situation in World War II.[2]

Post-World War II

The Fuji name was briefly used on a Shinjuku - Kawaguchiko service (Chūō Main Line) in 1950, but did not return to the Tokaido corridor until 1 October 1961, when the Fuji service resumed as a daytime limited express between Tokyo and Kobe using 151 series EMUs.[2]

After the Tokaido Shinkansen opened on 1 October 1964, the Fuji became a Tokyo-Ōita sleeper service using 20 series sleeping cars. Between 1965 and 1980, the service was extended to Nishi-Kagoshima Station, becoming the longest train service in Japanese history: the {{convert|1574.2|km|mi|abbr=on}} Tokyo-Kagoshima run took over 24 hours (departing Tokyo at 18:00 and arriving Nishi-Kagoshima at 18:03). From 1980 to 1997, the Fuji operated between Tokyo and Miyazaki (Miyazaki Station or Minami-Miyazaki Station).

Dining car service was discontinued from March 1993.[2]

From 1 March 2005, the Fuji was combined with the Hayabusa service between Tokyo and Moji, following the discontinuation of the Sakura service which previously operated in conjunction with the Hayabusa. Finally, the Fuji was discontinued in its entirety from the start of the revised timetable on 14 March 2009, due to declining ridership.[2]

Rolling stock

The train was formed of 14 series sleeping cars based at JR Kyushu's Kumamoto Depot, typically consisting of six cars in the Hayabusa portion and six cars in the Fuji portion. The train was hauled by a JR West Class EF66 electric locomotive between Tokyo and Shimonoseki, a JR Kyushu Class EF81-400 electric locomotive between Shimonoseki and Moji (through the undersea Kanmon Tunnel), and by a JR Kyushu Class ED76 electric locomotive from Moji to Ōita.[3]

See also

  • Blue Train (Japan)

References

1. ^"JR Timetable" August 2008 issue
2. ^{{Citation | title = 寝台特急"富士"・"はやぶさ"ものがたり (The Story of the "Fuji" and "Hayabusa" Sleeping Car Limited Expresses) | journal = Railfan Magazine | volume = 49 | issue = 575 | pages = 22–35 | date = March 2009 | url = | doi = | id = }}
3. ^"JR新幹線&特急列車ファイル" (JR Shinkansen & Limited Express Train File), published 2008 by Kōtsū Shimbun

External links

{{commons category|Fuji (train)}}
  • [https://web.archive.org/web/20081017154245/http://www.jr-odekake.net/train/hayabusa_fuji/ Hayabusa & Fuji train information] {{ja icon}}
  • JR Kyushu website {{en icon}}
{{JR Kyushu trains}}

5 : Kyushu Railway Company|Named passenger trains of Japan|Night trains of Japan|Railway services introduced in 1929|Railway services discontinued in 2009

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