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China Railways 25G rolling stock | |
---|---|
In service | 1991- |
Manufacturer | Changchun Passenger Carriage Factory |
Built at | CRRC Changchun CRRC Qingdao Sifang CRRC Tangshan CRRC Nanjing Puzhen |
Capacity | 36 (soft sleeper) 66 (hard sleeper) |
Operators | China Railway Ethiopian Railway Kenya Railways Laos–China Railway Company Limited |
Specifications | |
Car body construction | steel |
Car length | 26.6 m (87 ft) (over couplers) 25.5 m (84 ft) (not including couplers) |
Width | 3,105 mm (10 ft 2.2 in) |
Height | 4,433 mm (14 ft 6.5 in) |
Doors | 4 |
Maximum speed | 120 km/h (75 mph) (service) 140 km/h (87 mph) (structure) |
Braking system(s) | disc and flange |
Coupling system | AAR couplers |
Track gauge | 1,435 mm 1,520 mm (Mongolian) |
China Railways 25G rolling stock (Chinese: 中国铁路25G型客车), or China Railways 25 improved rolling stock (Chinese: 中国铁路25改进型客车) is a series of passenger carriages built in China. The carriages run services in mainland China, and on the Trans-Siberian Railway for international services to Moscow.[1] They are also exported to Mombasa–Nairobi Standard Gauge Railway, Addis Ababa–Djibouti Railway, Guinea railways, Uganda Standard Gauge railways and Boten-Vientiane railway.[2]
After the success of building the China Railways 25A rolling stocks, the Railway Bureau of China (now China Railway) decided to develop a new type of "Upgraded 25.5 metre sized air-conditioned and non air-conditioned passenger coaches" (升级换代产品 25.5米空调和非空调客车). The development lasted for a year till the first 25G carriage was built in Changchun Rolling Stocks Factory (now CRRC Changchun) and first used on the express train 13/4 Beijing to Shanghai to replace the 22 coaches.
To meet the 25B and 25G coaches standard in 2002, the newly built coaches were fitted with new bogies. Those bogies are still used on modern 25G coaches with Anti-wheelslip devices and disc brakes. Most trains are fitted with sliding doors, double layer windows and rubber connections between coaches. Some of them are also fitted with vacuum sewage compartments and sealed connections. However, not all new generation coaches had those devices.
To meet the 25G coaches standard in 2004, all new-built 25G rolling stocks are equipped with disc and air brakes. 25G coaches built after 2003 are fitted with DC-AC converters, and available to convert the DC600V electric charge into AC380V, AC220V, AC110V electric charges to serve the brake, air-conditioning, lighting and power outlet systems. Most 3rd-generation 25Gs built after 2008 removed the sliding doors and vacuum sewage compartments to reduce maintenance costs.
Since the 25G coaches were first built in 1991, those coaches have been running on lines all over China as well as many other countries, most of them using Chinese standard. A typical 25G consist for K-series trains usually have 6 to 9 hard seat cars (YZ25G, the YZ stands for hard seat or 硬座, yìngzùo), one dining car (CA25G, the CA stands for 餐车, cānchē), one soft sleeper car (RW25G, the RW stands for 软卧, ruǎnwò), several hard sleeper cars (YW25G, the YW stands for 硬卧, yìngwò) and a luggage car (XL25G, XL stands for 行李). Some of the trains run on non-electrified routes and cannot receive electric supplies from locomotives are also fitted with a generator car (KD25G, the KD stands for 空调发电, kōngtiáofādiàn). Some trains also have soft seat cars (RZ25G, the RZ stands for 软座, ruǎnzuò).