Chuo Shinkansen: Japan's Incredible Rail System

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  • čas přidán 11. 09. 2024
  • Note: The Trans-Siberian video actually came out before this one, so you can enjoy that already... or maybe you already have :).
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Komentáře • 1,5K

  • @jt92
    @jt92 Před 4 lety +487

    9:57 I feel like you could have given credit to the wonderful Mustard channel for that bit of B-roll. He makes amazing animations for his videos and a lot of the audience of this channel would enjoy his videos.

    • @ParadigmSh1ft_
      @ParadigmSh1ft_ Před 4 lety +37

      Yeah I instantly went to the description to see if credit was given. Disappointed to see it wasn't.

    • @leonkernan
      @leonkernan Před 4 lety +16

      I’d know those amazing renders anywhere. Instantly picked up on that.

    • @mumenraider
      @mumenraider Před 4 lety +2

      Exactly. There is no credit for Mustard

    • @LeoMkII
      @LeoMkII Před 4 lety +5

      yup, Mustard is easily one of the best youtube channels

    • @Assassinus2
      @Assassinus2 Před 4 lety +7

      NewLogic That’s not only disappointing, it verges on IP theft unless Mustard’s made his material open-source (or if he got that render from somewhere else open-source.)
      Proper crediting wouldn’t take that much effort, really.

  • @KAAKKK
    @KAAKKK Před 4 lety +9

    I work at the NRM in York. We have the only 0 Series Shinkansen leading car outside of Japan.
    Also, the extension from Nagoya to Osaka is scheduled to open in 2037 as extra funding was secured. It was originally planned for 2045 as you stated.
    For anyone interested, the UK actually had the first commercial maglev train. It never really took off in the UK so we got rid of it. And now look where we are.

  • @Voyagerch75
    @Voyagerch75 Před 4 lety +543

    Fun fact: The Gotthard Base Tunnel was opened one year earlier than planned and cost less than originally anticipated. Not all megaprojects are planned inaccurately ;-)

    • @henk-3098
      @henk-3098 Před 4 lety +124

      Well if it was opened earlier than expected and under budget then it was still planned inaccurately ;-)

    • @TheMightyZwom
      @TheMightyZwom Před 4 lety +35

      Well, usually before a project starts, offers by different companies are collected and the lowest bidder often wins the contract. It is absolutely no surprise that this leads to megaprojects completely overdoing their original budget. So yeah, pretty awesome that the Gotthard Tunnel didn’t overstretch its budget :D

    • @mihaidiaconescu7452
      @mihaidiaconescu7452 Před 4 lety +14

      Love it when everyone complaints on how late trains are in their country while I'm here in Romania waiting for 3 hours no big deal. 🇷🇴 🇷🇴 🇷🇴

    • @tigersharkzh
      @tigersharkzh Před 4 lety +11

      @@henk-3098 In the buget there was a lot of head room for unforseen difficulties. The companies constructing it also streamlined their process that also saved money, most of which was not pocketed by them but reduced the cost the state paid for the project.

    • @ImpmanPDX
      @ImpmanPDX Před 4 lety +14

      I agree with your sentiment, but that was in Switzerland. I would almost expect them to come in early and under budget.

  • @timheyer5660
    @timheyer5660 Před 4 lety +294

    1930s: Japanese talking about doing high speed rail
    2020: Australian government still talking about doing high speed rail

    • @donbrashsux
      @donbrashsux Před 4 lety +12

      NZ still thinking about trains for its largest city..still

    • @Ometecuhtli
      @Ometecuhtli Před 4 lety +19

      Australian government: we're gonna plan for...
      Annual wildfires: hello, I see you won't be needing that money

    • @railtrolley
      @railtrolley Před 4 lety +2

      And there is the Victorian country network, which has to reduce track speed on very hot summer days from 115 km/h to 80 km/h - track buckling risk.

    • @rjfaber1991
      @rjfaber1991 Před 4 lety +12

      @Sasha Da Masta Melbourne-Canberra-Sydney is an almost perfect route for a high-speed railway line. Two major metropoleis with the nation's capital in the middle, with little reason to have many other stations in between that would increase travel time between the two termini. Sydney-Port Macquarie-Gold Coast-Brisbane is less perfect but still perfectly feasible, and with both those lines, you've linked the three most populous urban centres in the country.

    • @koolerking440
      @koolerking440 Před 4 lety +2

      Timothy Heyer Still arguing if they should make a high speed Syd-Melb
      line

  • @ilkoallexandroff
    @ilkoallexandroff Před 4 lety +191

    I’m living in Japan for 12 years, and Shinkansen is amazing! Unfortunately the Linear Shinkansen will be postponed, because of environmental issues, that JR and Shizuoka Prefecture can’t reach agreement for more than 5 years already! It is a recent news from this week! One more thing, they managed to get the schedule for Nagoya-Osaka 8 years earlier, and it is expected to launch in 2037, not 2045!
    Also it is pronounced “Chu-oo-Shinkansen” Cheers from Japan!

    • @mayankrajsinghchauha
      @mayankrajsinghchauha Před 4 lety +1

      what is linear shinkansen??

    • @TheNewGreenIsBlue
      @TheNewGreenIsBlue Před 4 lety +18

      @@mayankrajsinghchauha This refers to the propulsion method. In the Japanese language, rather than call the trains "Mag-levs", they call the trains "Linear Motor Cars". (This is why the prototype was called the L0 series).
      The trains are propelled by "Linear Induction Motors". Note that LIMs are not limited to magnetically levitated trains. Vancouver's SkyTrain, New York's AirTrain, one of Osaka's metro lines, and of course... certain roller coasters are all propelled by linear induction motors. These trains don't rely on the limits of wheel friction to propel themselves or slow down so they're usually quite low maintenance.

    • @keiming2277
      @keiming2277 Před 3 lety

      I think it's kind of annoying you have to spend 4 hours from Shin-Hakodate-Hokuto to Sapporo after 4 hours on Shinkansen

    • @TheNewGreenIsBlue
      @TheNewGreenIsBlue Před 3 lety +3

      @@keiming2277 Well, about ~3h 15m but even with Shinkansen all the way to Sapporo, it would add 45m. In reality, few (other than tourists) would regularly make the Sapporo to Tokyo trip by train. Where the train WOULD be useful is between Sapporo and Hakodate or Sapporo and Sendai along the way. Sapporo to Tokyo is a 90 minute flight. Same thing with Hiroshima to Tokyo... not commonly taken... but Hiroshima to Osaka all the time. Helps that Hiroshima's airport is so inconveniently located.

    • @keiming2277
      @keiming2277 Před 3 lety +2

      @@TheNewGreenIsBlue I brought the JR pass so I can travel various locations in Hokkaido for a fairly good price.
      And, I wanted to experience the bullet trains.

  • @LegionOfEclaires
    @LegionOfEclaires Před 4 lety +767

    America: Train is 15 minutes late, just another day at the office for the train driver.
    Japan: 30 seconds late, driver starts to panic.

    • @chenjamin1
      @chenjamin1 Před 4 lety +209

      more like driver has to make a televised apology to the nation

    • @ericvacca551
      @ericvacca551 Před 4 lety +50

      @@chenjamin1 yup that's an actual thing

    • @nicklasodh
      @nicklasodh Před 4 lety +56

      .. and when leaving 15 seconds too early, the whole management almost does harakiri in public.

    • @lovelessissimo
      @lovelessissimo Před 4 lety +56

      Imagine the frustration at the Swiss-Italian border. Efficient swiss clashing with the casual Italians. Fun to think about.

    • @avrajitsarkar8563
      @avrajitsarkar8563 Před 4 lety +41

      I WENT TO JAPAN 5 YEARS AGO AND Shinkansen was late by 30 minutes but still reached destination only 5 minutes late

  • @TheAlphaDingo
    @TheAlphaDingo Před 3 lety +7

    As someone who commutes by train to work, after riding the shinkansen and learning about delays that are literally measured in seconds across an entire year - going back to my normal train here in Australia made me feel like such a peasant. Japan are light years ahead of everyone for reliable, safe, fast and efficient transport. Even the cleaners who have only a few minutes to clear out the carriages are incredibly talented at what they do. The whole system works in perfect harmony.

  • @EazyGunnaGaming
    @EazyGunnaGaming Před 4 lety +242

    Guess I'm a time traveler, cause that Trans siberian railway video was definitely watched a couple days ago 😂

    • @DRUKENHOBO
      @DRUKENHOBO Před 4 lety +8

      you beat me to it by 4 min, good on ya.

    • @AcidEric01
      @AcidEric01 Před 4 lety +4

      @@DRUKENHOBO naaa he just traveled back to before your comment :P :D

    • @Akislav1990
      @Akislav1990 Před 4 lety +1

      Apparently the TV show Dark is now actually a documentary.

  • @AkaixJK
    @AkaixJK Před 3 lety +8

    Was at Japan for 10 days for a short holiday. Really saved a hell lot of time and money because of the Japanese shinkansen.
    I arrived and departed from Osaka Kansai but thanks to their extremely efficient Shinkansen, I was able to go to places like Hiroshima, Kyoto and even as far as Tokyo even when my hotel is based in Osaka.
    One way from Shin-Osaka to Tokyo station was about close to 3 hours. I saved a few hundred dollars because of the Japan Rail Pass which allowed me to travel on almost all JR lines regardless of JR's normal trunk line or the shinkansen (excluding for Nozomi and Mizuho shinkansen).
    The cost of the shinkansen train ticket for a two way trip between Osaka and Tokyo is already more than the cost of my Japan Rail Pass and I travel both ways for 3 straight days even though I spent like 6 hours on a shinkansen on each of the 3 days.
    Trust me, if you plan to travel to at least 2 cities in Japan, you will need a Japan Rail Pass (they have regional and country wide passes) and it is way cheaper to buy it at your own country before your flight to Japan.

  • @DeputatKaktus
    @DeputatKaktus Před 4 lety +113

    Germany: gets praised for efficiency
    Germans: well, you guys clearly haven’t travelled with Deutsche Bahn yet. We‘re glad if trains aren’t delayed for more than 15 minutes half the time!
    Japan: Hold my beer...

    • @Azu512
      @Azu512 Před 4 lety +7

      *Sake

    • @MagetoLp
      @MagetoLp Před 4 lety +2

      shinkansen is just a copy of the maglev system

    • @albsi7630
      @albsi7630 Před 4 lety +9

      That is in part to the mixed traffic on German Rails. Mixing slow freight trains, fast express trains and dense commuter trains on the same lines has its problems, especially on some choke points.

    • @drscopeify
      @drscopeify Před 4 lety +3

      The thing is that Japan is very unique. The country has limited land to work with and the terrain is very mountainous or has many changes in elevation. While there is a large highway network it isn't ideal and cannot be made much bigger than it is. Also the highway system has many bridges that at least when I was there they all look very expensive to build so they can't just add more lanes. Allot of the highways in Japan are basically elevated above ground for big sections. I guess in this circumstance trains are just cheaper, even very expensive high speed trains come out cheaper then building highways.

    • @lzh4950
      @lzh4950 Před 4 lety +1

      @@albsi7630 I guess on the flip side about half of the _shinkansen_ stations are in the more outlying areas of the cities they serve e.g. Osaka, Hakodate, Yokohama

  • @GenialHarryGrout
    @GenialHarryGrout Před 4 lety +86

    Japan (1960) - let's build a high speed rail system
    UK (1960) - Let's put Dr Beeching in charge of modernising the rail system

    • @ressljs
      @ressljs Před 4 lety +10

      I been on the train systems of both countries (I should point out I'm from America). Yes, the Japanese rail system is amazing and the British system is... Well, something less than that. But to be fair, Great Britain isn't that big; especially if you aren't building the rail line to service northern Scotland because it's got such a low population density. I'm not sure building an expensive high speed train is worth it. Japan, while not huge as far as total land area, is quite long. And there are big cities along most of its span.

    • @yeeted9466
      @yeeted9466 Před 4 lety +3

      America 1960’s - let’s not be racist

    • @ashcoates25
      @ashcoates25 Před 4 lety +1

      Genial Harry Grout 😥

    • @GenialHarryGrout
      @GenialHarryGrout Před 4 lety +7

      @@ressljs During the 1960's the UK closed around 1/3rd of it's network leaving a network that serviced mainly large towns and cities. Jump forward to 2020 and bit by bit lines are now being reopened around the UK at huge cost and many of these reopened lines aren't electrified. There is still parts of the UK that don't have rail or haven't had rail in over 50+ years.

    • @DinsdalePiranha67
      @DinsdalePiranha67 Před 4 lety +1

      America 1960's: We're losing our asses on passenger service. Let's hand it off to the government.

  • @jimfeldman4035
    @jimfeldman4035 Před 4 lety +94

    Another interesting part of their high speed rail is the amazing maintenance that goes on every day. Every inch (centimeter) of the line is computer inspected by special trains every evening.

    • @Dell-ol6hb
      @Dell-ol6hb Před 4 lety +25

      That sort of detail is why they have had zero fatalities and they are very rarely late

    • @kvogel9245
      @kvogel9245 Před 4 lety

      That's one reason why only one route is profitable.

    • @tigersharkzh
      @tigersharkzh Před 4 lety +21

      Not every evening, on average every 10 days. It's a special yellow Shinkansen that the Japanese love.

    • @rsrs8632
      @rsrs8632 Před 4 lety +14

      Ah yes, dr. Yellow. A train that has his own following!

    • @wyw201
      @wyw201 Před 4 lety +9

      K Vogel That one route produces enough cash flow to cover every other line and be net positive. On top of that, 1/3 of JR revenue comes from non-transportation related sources.

  • @silvestras88
    @silvestras88 Před 4 lety +5

    Been on Tokaido shinkansen twice. It really is a bliss. And the sushi box, and the 3 min departure time when the train stops at exact scheduled time. And the comfortable reclining chairs and the amazing scenery passing through your plane-like window.

  • @Darth_Revan25
    @Darth_Revan25 Před 4 lety +9

    Experienced the Shinkansen trains twice now. Once when I was 11 and last year at 23. Super impressive technology and transport designs. Blown away is an understatement. Hoping to return in 2022 sometime with two pals to visit my family! Love the country.

  • @lovelessissimo
    @lovelessissimo Před 4 lety +125

    If liking trains is sad, I'm the backup singer of a failed emo band.

    • @kreature6618
      @kreature6618 Před 4 lety +5

      I can't get why he needs to virtual signal to the young dumb folk out there - just say you like trains and be happy about it, no need to apologize.

    • @monsieurduquack5440
      @monsieurduquack5440 Před 4 lety +5

      He's probably referring to the original "I like trains" guy who sadly passed away

  • @spikes1529
    @spikes1529 Před 4 lety +182

    I felt like i time traveled when you said the video about Trans-Siberian railway.

    • @TheTruth-nd4uc
      @TheTruth-nd4uc Před 4 lety

      Same

    • @uncluckable6535
      @uncluckable6535 Před 4 lety

      Okay. So it's not just me...

    • @kennethallen3843
      @kennethallen3843 Před 4 lety

      Maybe it's the other trans Siberian railway

    • @holdadoor722
      @holdadoor722 Před 4 lety +1

      I also time traveled. Glad I have someone to share the experince with. Neil Degras Tyson would be amazed at all of us.

  • @EonityLuna
    @EonityLuna Před 4 lety +18

    Having delved quite deep into the world of Japanese railfan videos on CZcams, I dare say Japan has some of the world's most interesting and varied railway systems. From old-school tram, rural railway, and commuter rail train cars, all the way to modern, futuristic metro, intercity, and high-speed railway cars, Japan has them all. And then you also have a plethora of rubber-tyred metros and people mover systems, both straddle-beam and suspended monorail systems and lines, and maglev-based systems, such as the Linimo maglev metro system in Aichi, and the high-speed (and upcoming) Chuo Shinkansen mentioned here. It's all very fascinating, and if you are a huge railfan like me the variety of it all will suck you in pretty quick.
    .
    I have seen a video somewhere, where a so-called "mini-Shinkansen" train runs right alongside a steam locomotive, along a regular railway line that has been upgraded to allow specially-designed Shinkansen trains to run through-service onto them (but at slower regular-railway train speeds though). It's quite a sight to behold, and even that only just begins to describe the kind of railway variety you can see in Japan.

  • @C2K777
    @C2K777 Před 4 lety +190

    I mean is there even a debate as to whether the Gotthard Tunnel being a Mega Projects video.

    • @lightfire06
      @lightfire06 Před 4 lety +5

      Maybe the Brenner Base Tunnel with 64km would also be a great Mega Projects Video. In like ten years when it is opening.

    • @marcbeebee6969
      @marcbeebee6969 Před 4 lety

      I wanna see o used that tunnel 50 times at least and in not 30 yet

    • @plastixat
      @plastixat Před 4 lety

      @@lightfire06 The Semmering tunnel to replace the world cultural heritage von ghega railway from vienna to styria where i live is also considered a megaproject at least here

    • @coweatsman
      @coweatsman Před 4 lety

      @@lightfire06 There is also a proposed Bohai Sea tunnel between Dalian in Liaoning Province, China and Yantai in Shandong Province, China which would be 200 km in length, if it is built. One slight problem is the 2 seismic fault lines passing under the sea.

    • @jennadeegee8407
      @jennadeegee8407 Před 4 lety

      For real, though. I need to see this!

  • @jaredmulconry
    @jaredmulconry Před 4 lety +15

    Having travelled on Japan's current design for the Shinkansen, I can confirm that the ride is very smooth. It's also very roomy. Besides the entrance/exit, there's plenty of head room and leg room in the seats is better than I would have expected for someone like myself at 6'5".
    The seats are also very comfortable and there's very little noise inside, partly because the passenger area is well isolated from the outside and partly because loud conversation on a train will get you disapproving looks.

    • @Lowmanification
      @Lowmanification Před 4 lety +3

      If only we could impose the no loud conversation rule on public transit here in the US. It is incredibly annoying when a person decides that the bus is the correct location for them to call up a friend and then decides to put them on speaker phone. I can understand short conversations in the case of emergencies, but I shouldn't be able to hear both ends of a 30 minute long conversation about which neighbor is having an affair (to be fair, this one was at least mildly amusing to listen into).

  • @ignitionfrn2223
    @ignitionfrn2223 Před 3 lety +10

    0:35 - Chapter 1 - New trunk line
    2:55 - Chapter 2 - History
    4:55 - Chapter 3 - The early days
    6:10 - Chapter 4 - Expansion
    8:20 - Chapter 5 - Technology
    10:15 - Chapter 5.1 - 0 series
    10:50 - Chapter 5.2 - N700 Series Shinkansen
    11:25 - Chapter 6 - Today on the shinkansen
    14:00 - Chapter 7 - The future is Maglev
    16:30 - Chapter 8 - An example set

  • @MJer09128
    @MJer09128 Před 4 lety +13

    I've taken the Shinkansen many times on various routes in Japan. It's truly a wonderful experience in all ways.

  • @rayne5221
    @rayne5221 Před 4 lety +33

    I remember in high school and visiting Japan and when I took the train there and they were apologizing for being 2 minutes ahead of schedule. And would be at the station for the extra 2 minutes to get back on schedule

    • @ryantruax4635
      @ryantruax4635 Před 4 lety +6

      The Japanese: Apologizing for being too efficient. Lovely people they are

    • @romannasuti25
      @romannasuti25 Před 3 lety +3

      @@ryantruax4635 It does fuck up scheduling if a train departs early, it's quite rare in Japan but I once missed a train by like 5 seconds because it left about 15 seconds before the minute it said it'd depart (I had to do a running transfer, and in a big, convoluted mess of a station like Shibuya or Shinjuku transferring between lines can be complicated). Also, being in a train that was crazy early can be bad in really awful weather: If it's very cold, that can be uncomfortable as they typically have to leave the doors open.

  • @NathansWargames
    @NathansWargames Před 4 lety +469

    this guy has more channels than my Girlfriends Mixer desk ( she's a musician)

    • @alexanderlanglois5897
      @alexanderlanglois5897 Před 4 lety +45

      this guy has more channels than my girlfriend has personalities.

    • @cmdrtianyilin8107
      @cmdrtianyilin8107 Před 4 lety +55

      This guy has more channels than I have girlfriends.

    • @bernardfender5147
      @bernardfender5147 Před 4 lety +2

      How many channels does her mixing desk have?

    • @dr.python
      @dr.python Před 4 lety +3

      This guy has more channels than coronavirus for entering a human host #koronauirusu

    • @ATReade
      @ATReade Před 4 lety +2

      And there all awesome!

  • @christianhegelbach3082
    @christianhegelbach3082 Před 4 lety +49

    Yes, please! Make a video of the 'NEAT' Switzerland's 21st century rail lines trough the Alps comprising of 3 main tunnels (Lötschberg, Gotthard & Ceneri Base Tunnel) scheduled to be fully operational by December 2020

  • @sayujraphael
    @sayujraphael Před 4 lety +156

    Average delay 24seconds😂
    In India we measure delays in Hours and Days😂

    • @billster1091
      @billster1091 Před 4 lety +8

      Ouch!!

    • @Ometecuhtli
      @Ometecuhtli Před 4 lety +2

      At least it isn't as bad as this airport: czcams.com/video/gEyFH-a-XoQ/video.html

    • @sebastianschmidt566
      @sebastianschmidt566 Před 4 lety +10

      In Germany we only call it a delay if the "Deutsche Bahn" arrives more then half an hour to late. 😂

    • @goosebump801
      @goosebump801 Před 4 lety +1

      Ometecuhtli O.M.GGGGG! I can’t remember last time I laughed so hard! 😂

    • @AndrewMitchell123
      @AndrewMitchell123 Před 4 lety +1

      bro here in Czech Republic it's the same :D national lines run by national companies suck, guess we have to all use trains run by private companies to have such short delays

  • @matsv201
    @matsv201 Před 4 lety +125

    "320km/h, this is the shinkansen"
    Shows the chou shinkansen with a top speed of 505km/h
    To be clear, chou is the specific name of the maglev line specifically.

    • @gratefuldean69
      @gratefuldean69 Před 4 lety +12

      @Jorn Navarre umm actually...it was 606km/h

    • @93matarl
      @93matarl Před 4 lety +4

      when i started to watch it i was expecing the maglev, not the old version of the shikansen. but you are not wrong.

    • @8NCLI8
      @8NCLI8 Před 4 lety +10

      *chuo

    • @Ometecuhtli
      @Ometecuhtli Před 4 lety +13

      *Chuo shinkansen, 505 km/h is its operational top speed, of course trains can go faster, especially in testing you want to know where it limits are and how it behaves.

    • @matsv201
      @matsv201 Před 4 lety +1

      Like someone else already wrote.. operating speed.

  • @theodosios2615
    @theodosios2615 Před 3 lety +3

    I took the shinkansen a few times, it is incredible. Fast, comfortable, efficient. And how insane is it that in over 50 years of service, with over 3000 high-speed trains in service, they have never had a single fatality?

  • @Benjamin_Danklin
    @Benjamin_Danklin Před 4 lety +324

    I like trains!

    • @craigyami
      @craigyami Před 4 lety +11

      I like trains as well and im trying to get him to do the concept of the transcontinental railroad/ Bering sea bridge

    • @aterfelis4708
      @aterfelis4708 Před 4 lety +11

      I like lamp!

    • @supahfly_uk
      @supahfly_uk Před 4 lety +23

      I like turtles

    • @FuckFiresOfFury
      @FuckFiresOfFury Před 4 lety +14

      I like turtles

    • @FuckFiresOfFury
      @FuckFiresOfFury Před 4 lety +7

      @@supahfly_uk dammit.... You beat me to it!!! 🤣

  • @ronin7997
    @ronin7997 Před 4 lety +7

    Took the Shinkansen from Tokyo to Mount Fuji to hike up the mountain. Amazing experience; only downside was the ride being so short (lasted a little over 30 minutes).

  • @DinerLingo
    @DinerLingo Před 4 lety +56

    That Tokyo-Osaka trip is cheaper than Philly to NYC on the Acela.

    • @RambosBodyguard
      @RambosBodyguard Před 4 lety +4

      Business class is $49 one way Philly to NYC, or $98 round trip. Boston to Washington D.C. is only $69 in Business class, round trip is only $138. The Tokyo to Osaka round trip would be $243, or $135 one way.

    • @DinerLingo
      @DinerLingo Před 4 lety +11

      @@RambosBodyguard I commute btw Philly & NYC all the time for work. Perhaps you're looking at current prices, but that's not normal Acela pricing. Normal Acela pricing is around $150 each way & up.

    • @GintaPPE1000
      @GintaPPE1000 Před 4 lety +3

      ​@@DinerLingo No, on the contrary, those are the kinds of fares you pay if you aren't a procrastinator or poor planner. The pricing skyrockets as the departure date draws near because most Acela trains are almost-completely sold out by then. If you book at least two weeks in advance, you won't get into triple digit Business class fares on the Acela unless you continue beyond New Haven at least. First class is another story, but that is subject to even worse price scalping.

    • @RambosBodyguard
      @RambosBodyguard Před 4 lety +2

      @@DinerLingo I just went on the Amtrak website and put those locations in and got those fare prices. I did make the travel date a couple weeks away, so I guess it does vary a lot in price. I went and checked again and it is more expensive if you book travel for the next day or so, but tickets about two weeks away are a bit cheaper. At least I now know to plan my trips a few weeks in advance to save a bunch of money.

    • @jossdeiboss
      @jossdeiboss Před 4 lety +4

      @@RambosBodyguard You have to consider the ticket price as standard (buying at the train station right before boarding). All the others are special internet discounts that usually lead to poor or no flexibility, whilst you have to consider a fully flexible ticket like on a commuter train, which is the same in Japan.

  • @kvthe2nd903
    @kvthe2nd903 Před 4 lety +48

    Weird megaproject video idea:
    The SI unit system
    It's often taken for granted but it took a lot of work and money to determine how to define sizes and so on. (Like two Frenchman who needed to measure the distance between Calais and Barcelona while the Napoleonic wars were happening)

    • @goosebump801
      @goosebump801 Před 4 lety

      Megaproject? Or Today I Found Out? Or one of Simon’s many other channels? Regardless, it would be interesting

  • @rgenericson5361
    @rgenericson5361 Před 4 lety +2

    Took the Shinkansen from Osaka to Tokyo, absolutely amazing, like flying in a plane! Absolutely whisper quiet, no squeaking or squealing. Even more amazing when watching a train going the other direction at 170 mph.

  • @nashthebaker9338
    @nashthebaker9338 Před 4 lety +11

    Should do the French counterpart to these trains, the TGV. The TGV has the fastest speed record for a conventional wheeled train at 578 km/h.

  • @warbledurbler7905
    @warbledurbler7905 Před 4 lety +19

    1950's: "The Japanese were just a little bit ahead of the game", Rest of the world obtain revenue through speeding fines...
    2020: "The Japanese were still very much ahead of the game"

    • @carholic-sz3qv
      @carholic-sz3qv Před 4 lety +1

      @Central Intelligence Agency nope

    • @collinssilver7075
      @collinssilver7075 Před 4 lety +2

      @Central Intelligence Agency what China does is to keep stealing people technology

  • @999knives
    @999knives Před 4 lety +9

    I'm only 2:50 in and their are already a bunch of weird in accuracies like the term bullet train being from the 1930's not 1960's and the Chuo Shinkasen being the first maglev line even though it's under construction and China has had a commercial maglev line since 2004.
    I like these shows but they seem really rushed. Like the ISS episode implies that Mir was the first space station but the USSR's Salyut programme was decades older and included a military space station that had an anti-aircraft gun to test whether you can shoot satellites in orbit (turns out the answer is yes).

  • @professorsogol5824
    @professorsogol5824 Před 3 lety +1

    One of the advantages/benefits of the Shinkansen (or almost any train) system is that departure and arrival are at city centers or sub-centers. (For some routes , there are three stations In Tokyo from which a shinkansen can be boarded.)
    If one were to travel by air, one would first have to get out of the city center and to the airport. Then one would have to check in for one's flight probably at least half an hour before flight time. Then there is security. Then boarding, backing out from the gate, etc etc before one even gets into the air. On arrival, one has to wait for luggage (or travel very light) and then get into the city center. Automobiles have the problems of traffic jams and parking not to mention actually having to drive the car (sometimes it is amusing but often it is a tedious task that demands total concentration).

  • @CocoaBeachLiving
    @CocoaBeachLiving Před 4 lety +4

    Fascinating show Simon. I knew about Japan pioneering high-speed trains, yet I didn't know most of these facts. Well presented 👍😁

  • @DougCaldwell
    @DougCaldwell Před 4 lety +1

    Riding on this train was a highlight experience for me when I was working in Japan for a few months in 2008. Its a really smooth ride. I would encourage everyone visiting the country to plan on taking a ride somewhere on a bullet train. A few riding tips. Nobody spoke on their mobile phone in the car. If one needed to make a call you left your seat and went to a separate compartment for phone calls and smoking. Buy a bento box lunch at your departure station and eat along the way. Call home and leave a message while traveling at 200mph for the fun of it. Last note: I feel your pain from the internet trolls who don't like your Japanese or other foreign language pronunciation. I get the same snarky comments as one from Texas.

  • @sayujraphael
    @sayujraphael Před 4 lety +59

    Sam from Wendover : Planes
    Simon : Trains

  • @seankenno7
    @seankenno7 Před 4 lety +2

    I travelled from Tokyo to Kyoto and back on a bullet train in 2018... it’s the smoothest thing I’ve ever travelled in...I slept like a baby

  • @zinussan50
    @zinussan50 Před 4 lety +52

    One of Shinkansen features is they apologise for being early than scheduled.

    • @comettamer
      @comettamer Před 4 lety +6

      Aye, and if theyre like, 30 seconds off in either direction it is a very huge deal. Fortunately, they're plenty capable of setting things right.

    • @thebigitchy
      @thebigitchy Před 4 lety +8

      Well yea, because if they leave early, people transferring from other lines end up missing their train.

    • @ruangoto
      @ruangoto Před 4 lety +1

      Keith's Cafe they never depart earlier than schedule

    • @kc3302
      @kc3302 Před 4 lety +4

      Zin, are you able to provide some proof for this claim? I've never seen this happen myself nor have I heard/read about it. They just don't depart early. You may be getting mixed up with a non-Shinkansen train a couple of years ago which departed 15 seconds early and it was national news with an apology issued by the train company.

    • @kc3302
      @kc3302 Před 4 lety +2

      CometTamer I was surprised a couple of years ago when my Shinkansen departed 3 minutes late, but after a few stations it was back on schedule. The Shinkansen timetables have a capacity to make up a small amount of late running by operating at a slightly higher speed between stations.

  • @mattdumbrill8324
    @mattdumbrill8324 Před 4 lety +19

    9:58 I guess u asked mustard about this footage. I feel like there would be a connection there.

  • @DRUKENHOBO
    @DRUKENHOBO Před 4 lety +67

    Hi simon
    im not sure if you have done a video on it but, a video on the construction of the swiss defensive line during the cold war would be cool. (all the bunkers + setting their bridges to blow)
    For the commenters,
    if you like the idea please like or comment on this so simon might see.
    if you hate the idea dislike so simon knows not to do it.

    • @mediabox8280
      @mediabox8280 Před 4 lety +2

      Oh that does sound like a good one!

    • @cjeam9199
      @cjeam9199 Před 4 lety +2

      I’d be fascinated by that because I’m extremely sceptical about it.
      I’ve heard all sorts of variations of that claim from the explosives already being in the bridges to holes for charges being predrilled in every bridge constructed. I’m not convinced at all. I don’t think any modern bridge in Switzerland is designed in such a way that it’s easy to blow it up, I think that the most likely situation is just that the military have maybe looked at every bridge and planned where they’d need to put explosives to blow it up.

    • @Valeryu_Minka
      @Valeryu_Minka Před 4 lety +1

      This would be rad! I'd love an in-depth look at the whole thing.

    • @mulgerbill
      @mulgerbill Před 4 lety +2

      Hell yeah, have a booster comment

    • @goosebump801
      @goosebump801 Před 4 lety +1

      Very interesting!

  • @TheMightyZwom
    @TheMightyZwom Před 4 lety +2

    Maglevs are awesome. I've been on a business trip to Shanghai (China) twice and was on the Maglev there travelling at about 420km/h. That is quite a thing to experience. And the entire time I had “Monorail… Monorail… MONORAAAAIL! (Mono… Doh!)” stuck in my head :D

  • @mulattoraver
    @mulattoraver Před 4 lety +3

    I still remember the first time I rode the Shinkansen. It was 1997, and I was travelling from Tokyo to Gunma to see my girlfriend at the time. I was fascinated by how fast I was cruising through the scenery. It actually scared me. Fast-forward to 2020 and the Shinkansen is just another piece of infrastructure (THAT IS STILL FUN TO RIDE!!!!) 🚅

  • @redoctober6521
    @redoctober6521 Před 4 lety +2

    Anyone who is planning to spend time in Japan should consider purchasing a Japan Rail Pass that will allow you to travel on the Shinkansen for 7, 14, or 21 days for 1 cost. (currently about $275 US for a 7 day pass, close to the cost of 1 round trip ticket to Osaka from Tokyo). For me, it’s better than flying (roughly the same time when you consider the time to and from the airport and the security checkpoints, and any flight delays) and you can sit in a comfortable seat, enjoy a freshly made bento 🍱 with a can of beer, Highball, or Strong Zero, and relax and enjoy the scenic views of Japan speed past your window...

  • @Outland9000
    @Outland9000 Před 4 lety +4

    It really is quite a shocker how different the trains in the UK and Japan are! It's the only way to travel between cities in Japan and for a tourist is not really that expensive.

  • @magical_catgirl
    @magical_catgirl Před 4 lety +1

    The Shinkansen pricing is a bit more complex then what was mentioned.Train fares in Japan are distance based (even the local public transport), not flat fare or zone based as in many other places around the world.
    The Tōkaidō Shinkansen has 17 stations and 3 types of train service. The Nozomi only stops at the 6 major stations (Tokyo, Shinagawa, Yokohama, Nagoya, Kyoto, Osaka), the Hikari stops at between 6 and 14 stations, depending on the given service, and the Kodama stops at all 17.
    The Nozomi is more expensive then the Kodama. There is a surcharge for the Shinkansen compared to the regular train (there is also a "slow" train Tōkaidō main line which has 166 stations) and there is a surcharge to reserve a seat.
    You can book an unreserved seat, and get a slight discount (which could be your only option to get a given train if the reserved seats are booked out), but you could end up standing in the aisle of an unreserved car.You can also book a "green car" (first class) seat.
    The base Tokyo-Osaka shinkansen fare is 8910JPY.
    Once you account for the surcharges, the Nozomi is 19590JPY (first class), 14720JPY (reserved), 13870JPY (unreserved) and the Hikari and Kodama are 19270JPY (first class), 14400JPY (reserved), 13870JPY (unreserved)

  • @Cmplexrincc
    @Cmplexrincc Před 4 lety +21

    "i like trains" - Simon Whistler. 2020.

  • @feartheturnip
    @feartheturnip Před 4 lety +1

    Im from the UK & I traveled from Tokyo to Hiroshima in 2019 (with a change of trains in Kyoto) & the very comfortable travel time was 4hr 10mins I think, including the change & this wasn't the fasted shinkansen! these trains are gorgeous & a treat to use.The Japanese are so polite, the conductors bow to the travelers at ingress/egress of each carriage. anyone visiting Japan, you can get a JR rail pass which includes most shinkansens free & a lot of other trains in the country. It's amazing they can go from 180mph to 0 & stop EXACTLY at the gate on the platform for that shinkansen (within an inch) & do all this exactly on time. the shinkansen platforms have barriers with a gate , colour coded to match the shinkansen that will stop there (they all have different names & colours, to make it easy to find the one you booked). I highly recommend it. I might have some videos of the trip on my channel.

  • @Duggie1-w3x
    @Duggie1-w3x Před 4 lety +13

    One Video I would like to see is the Tokyo Flood protection system

  • @BaronSamedi1959
    @BaronSamedi1959 Před 4 lety

    Three years ago I travelled on the Kyoto to Tokyo Shinkansen and it had a delay of ONE minute! The chief train attendant personally came to each car and in Japanese and English offered his most profound apologies for such unheard-of incident. They also updated all connecting train schedules to make sure that all on board could make their connection.
    If in Belgium a train arrives within one minute of its scheduled arrival, people will kiss the train attendant and fall on their knees in utter amazement and thankfulness.

  • @muskyoxes
    @muskyoxes Před 4 lety +64

    the US could take one year's military budget and build a dozen things this big and useful.

    • @rjfaber1991
      @rjfaber1991 Před 4 lety +19

      Unfortunately the US has a terrible record of building impressive infrastructure and then completely neglecting to perform regular maintenance on it, and I don't know if I want to go at 600km/h over a viaduct that may or may not collapse while I'm crossing it. I suppose it would be a quick death, which is nice, but as a general rule I prefer to stay alive while using public transport.

    • @themajortom69
      @themajortom69 Před 4 lety +2

      @@rjfaber1991 I will grant you that upkeep isn't done correctly but everything else you said is verifiable wrong as a matter of fact I must ask have you ever been to the states?

    • @mabhodlelajj1195
      @mabhodlelajj1195 Před 4 lety +3

      @@rjfaber1991 america,a country that have been leading in mega infrastructures for most of the century,and even now have one of the most impressive infrastructures in the world,you claim it has a bad record in imressive infrastructure?You are not joking,you are joking your self.

    • @noth606
      @noth606 Před 4 lety +12

      Or you know, pay the Japanese to do it properly and maintain it properly :) I'm European and I've been on our "high speed trains" and I've also been on the Shinkansen. I'd take the Shinkansen over anything the US or any European government comes up with any day, all day. It feels like you are sitting still, the only way you know you are moving is looking out the windows. It's one of the most odd experiences I've ever had because even slow trains in Europe are bumpy and vibrate and you have to secure your drink to not spill it. The Shinkansen is really amazing, if you go to Japan you should definitely try it, of all impressive Japanese things in technical terms, that impressed me by far the most, so much in fact that when I go back next time I am going to use it again :-). It's far better than any other form of travel when you can use it.

    • @mabhodlelajj1195
      @mabhodlelajj1195 Před 4 lety

      @@emmaisalone american infrastructure is not bad,trains are bad because they are for most part not prefared use of transpotation,americans use cars for most part and their roads are on point.Schools,hospitals,cities and other public area gatherings are in good conditions,now tell me what really makes america infrustructure bad like you claim?Come now..USA has been leading in infustructure and even today in many parts it still does.

  • @elaineteut6508
    @elaineteut6508 Před 4 lety +2

    While visiting our daughter in Japan we rode this train from Tokyo to Kyoto. Beautiful train and ride.

  • @BenedictRaikes
    @BenedictRaikes Před 4 lety +7

    Hi Simon, you should consider doing a video on the Chinese high speed rail network. It’s cheap, fast (340km/h), extensive and is being expanded at an eye watering rate!

    • @lungha9827
      @lungha9827 Před 3 lety +1

      As with everything else in China…I wouldn’t trust their HSR as fast as I can take a dump over a underwater volcano…I want an original, not a copy…

  • @ShneekeyTheLost
    @ShneekeyTheLost Před 4 lety +1

    Fun fact: There's a rail being built (or rather, about to be built, it got the final permits back in May, but the current situation has delayed actually breaking ground) in Texas from Houston to Dallas based on the Shinkensen design, and with the aid and consultation of the Central Japan Rail Company. When completed, it will get you from one end to the other in 90 minutes (it's normally a 3-4 hour drive depending on traffic).

  • @tonytutone2003
    @tonytutone2003 Před 4 lety +6

    What currently amazes me on the train subject is the Chinese rail infrastructure. Maybe a future subject for this channel?

  • @Razgriz012386
    @Razgriz012386 Před 4 lety +1

    I love taking the Shinkansen to Osaka from Shinagawa it's longer than a flight but so smooth and comfortable with much more room.

  • @markanthony4655
    @markanthony4655 Před 4 lety +43

    As the UK Government is basically about to renationalise our railways. Could they get a Japanese management team to sort them out, as no one British seems to have a clue judging by the last 50 years. We British invented both the railway and Maglev, yet our railways are crap and overpriced and we don't use Maglev at all

    • @5t4n5
      @5t4n5 Před 4 lety +4

      The government doesn't need to sort the broken train set out, they're just going to spend 100billion building a nice new train set for rich people to use instead (poor people won't be able to afford HST), the peasants can keep the broken train set and it's delays and problems because in the land of boris peasants don't matter.

    • @themadhammer3305
      @themadhammer3305 Před 4 lety +1

      Given they can charge an absolute fortune to use the current abysmal system and the terrible public opinion towards new rail projects like HS2. I'm not holding my breath that renationalisation will do anything but make the already terrible service stay as awful as always while no government wants to even try and fix it

    • @dansrandomvideos2515
      @dansrandomvideos2515 Před 4 lety

      This has deeply sadenned me since I first learnt about japan. If i had the choice to do anything I would start a railway company that built all it's trains here and would set a standard for franchise or just genrally private train operators. No Ironing board seats allowed.

    • @TheMightyZwom
      @TheMightyZwom Před 4 lety +4

      Imho privatization of critical infrastructure is a cancer that many countries have been plagued with over the last decades... Hopefully most of them will be able to eradicate this disease.

    • @LiamNI
      @LiamNI Před 4 lety +3

      @@TheMightyZwom look what happened when the UK rail network was privatized..... Most expensive and close to the worst rail service in the world. You're right that sometimes the market doesn't work.

  • @julianbarazzutti7960
    @julianbarazzutti7960 Před 4 lety +1

    your translation among meassurment systems and units is quite useful, other youtubers need to learn to put into that effort, thank you for that.

  • @t.d.186
    @t.d.186 Před 4 lety +7

    Quite problematic that you do not mention this major change at all: for the *new* shinkansen track, Japan changed from ancient 3.5ft gauge to standard gauge (1,435 mm (4 ft 8 1⁄2 in), which allows for higer speeds throughout). 200km/h in 1965 was a great achievement. So really, in 1959 Japan started to desdign & build their railways from scratch.

    • @thebigitchy
      @thebigitchy Před 4 lety

      Since Japan is so mountainous, I assume they went with a narrow gauge track because the minimum turn radius can be much tighter than standard gauge. So far as I know, all local trains in Japan still run on narrow gauge tracks.
      The Shinkansen runs on standard gauge tracks because they give better stability at high speeds, and also to make it physically impossible for a local train to find its way onto a Shinkansen line.

  • @nathaniel1207
    @nathaniel1207 Před 4 lety +1

    I heard a story about shinkansen. A tourist was using the train and had heard of its reputation for a tight schedule. The train was set to enter the station in less than a minute, and he was watching his watch. 15 seconds, 10 seconds, 5 seconds. On the mark the train pulled in and stopped. Perfectly on time.

  • @14rs2
    @14rs2 Před 4 lety +28

    ALLEGEDLY!!! Oh wait wrong Simon Whistler channel 😂😂

  • @theofficialken1755
    @theofficialken1755 Před rokem +1

    Lived in Japan 6 years. Only rode the Shinkansen a few times but can confirm it's fast, smooth and comfortable. Made it from Yokohama to Fukui in no time

  • @ageha1127
    @ageha1127 Před 4 lety +40

    The most important thing for Japanese people is safety and punctuality.

  • @fatmaninthesun1
    @fatmaninthesun1 Před 4 lety +1

    There is one of the original Bullet Trains in the British National Railway Museum, York.
    It is enormous compared to the neighbouring steam train, and when it retired was still faster than anything we have today.
    I visited Japan 2years ago took to trips on the current fastest train that you showed.
    Passengers cannot take luggage as it would slow boarding, which is 45 seconds. That’s to get passengers both off and on. Incredible

  • @stevejessemey8428
    @stevejessemey8428 Před 4 lety +11

    I love Japan. Also I lived there for 15 years. Best and most efficient country in the world.

  • @angelaboyle9940
    @angelaboyle9940 Před 3 lety +1

    Having travelled on these trains I found it amusing when they apologised for leaving a few seconds early. So used to trains turning up late in the uk and being overcrowded

  • @the_kombinator
    @the_kombinator Před 4 lety +3

    Good thing the Koreans took the TGV and souped it up. I've been on both (Paris - Nice - 1995, Seoul - Daegu - 2012) and I was already impressed.
    When they snowpierce that, I'll take a seat.

  • @louis1617
    @louis1617 Před 4 lety +1

    The pricing of the Shinkansen varies as there are 3 different types on the Tokkaido Shinkansen called Hikari (stops at all stations), Kodoma (stops at fewer stations), and the Nozomi (the express train that only stops at Tokyo, Yokohama, Nagoya, Kyoto, and Osaka).

  • @joshduthie3401
    @joshduthie3401 Před 4 lety +34

    Wasn't built overnight.
    China: hold my beer.

    • @scottiethegreat74
      @scottiethegreat74 Před 4 lety +10

      I'm currently living here in China, and the development of the high speed rail system here, as well as subway systems in many cities, is absolutely astounding!!

    • @keaixiaomeinv
      @keaixiaomeinv Před 4 lety +7

      ​@@scottiethegreat74 Sure, but playing around with massive infrastructure projects is easy when you have total control over the population, unlimited cash supply, no environmental protection, and an endless pool of migrant workers who make little to no money at all. Chances are we are going to see a lot of what China is building to start crumbling in a decade or two. Oh, and I live in China, too.

    • @usernameONBEKEND
      @usernameONBEKEND Před 4 lety +2

      And than the building tumbles or dams cracks. Currently one of China's biggest secrets is that the Three Gorges Dam is probably starting to do the same. Investigation has started after Sardoba reservoir in the region of Sirdaryo in Uzbekistan had failed (contracted by China). It failed after 3 years and after heavy rain. There has been a lot of rain in the past month. Currently it is secretly discharging flood water. The Three Gorges dam had a lot of corruption inflating cost and lowering build quality. I hope this is not the case because of the human lives involved. We will never hear anything bad from China itself (there is no freedom of speech or press freedom - CCP tries to control every news outlet).

    • @zam023
      @zam023 Před 4 lety +3

      There was already a fatal high speed rail accident in China, and they haven't even been operating that long. When you rush things, it is a recipe for accidents.

    • @suzukigixxer1627
      @suzukigixxer1627 Před 4 lety

      @@keaixiaomeinv oh you wish,it would crumble don't you?Minimum to no wage?Stop spreading misinformation in the comment section.

  • @NZobservatory
    @NZobservatory Před 3 lety +2

    A lot of people, especially those opposed to railroads, never talk about the fact high speed rail travel leaves domestic air travel for dead. The flight time may be shorter than the time aboard a train covering the same route, but there is none of the chaotically inefficient airport circus at either end. Just buy a train ticket and get on board, then get off again a little while later at your destination, feeling fresh and relaxed and with none of the absurdities, anxieties and inconveniences of security gates and baggage claim and the joys of airport parking systems.

  • @tillyrhodes-mayo6448
    @tillyrhodes-mayo6448 Před 4 lety +21

    Simon you're nearly as bad as an English train with you're timetabling, you released the Siberian railway video first.

  • @cynthiasimpson931
    @cynthiasimpson931 Před 4 lety +1

    My family rode trains when we lived in Japan in the early 1960s, earlier than the Chuo Shinkansen. I don't remember a lot of what happened, as I was quite young, but I remember my mother bellowing "DOES ANYONE SPEAK ENGLISH?" in the terminal, because we'd gotten on the wrong train and ended up in the wrong town.

  • @carlengeler3478
    @carlengeler3478 Před 4 lety +11

    Please do the Swiss tunnel!!

  • @pompaompa3380
    @pompaompa3380 Před 4 lety +1

    Another fun fact about the shinkansen is that the trains are so successful that Japanese are going to export the e5 series Shinkansen (top speed 320 km/h) to India for the Mumbai- Ahmedabad high speed corridor ( u can see the e5 series at 4:41 )

  • @henkh8740
    @henkh8740 Před 4 lety +21

    GODHARD TUNNEL please!!

    • @CosRacecar
      @CosRacecar Před 4 lety +1

      @Richard Ball that's one good looking tunnel right there...

  • @TheBaldr
    @TheBaldr Před 4 lety +2

    You can fly round trip from Haenda to Kansai International on something like Peach Airways for $200. That is $40 cheaper to fly. Any longer trips it becomes exponential cheaper to fly or take a bus in Japan. (It is 2 hours to Hokkaido from Osaka by plane, 8-10 hours by train) $40 more and you save a bit of time, but if I was going someplace over 250Km I usually took a bus or flew, the Shikansen is just to expensive. The discounts Simon mentioned are there, but incredibly hard to get, you get one day a year to purchase discounted tickets as a Japanese Resident. (Foreign Tourist do get discounts) Booking months ahead will not change the price, that is lie.
    Don't get me wrong, I love riding the Shikansen, it is just not worth the expense.

    • @watcherit1311
      @watcherit1311 Před 4 lety

      Planes and especially buses are also less comfortable and slower (plane trip is not limited to a flight time). Time and comfort are kinda common things to be charged extra for.

    • @NozomuYume
      @NozomuYume Před 4 lety

      Have to figure in an extra hour at the airport before you even get on the plane, and this is assuming you are starting off anywhere near Haneda. You're way more likely to be starting off close to a Shinkansen station.
      Moreover, wherever you're coming from, the Shinkansen stations tend to be WAY better connected, whereas the odds are low that you're starting off next to the (slow) Tokyo Monorail or the Keikyu Airport Line. And even if you DO start off next to Keikyu Airport Line, it can get you to Shinagawa just as fast.
      The wash in terms of time spent seems to be Osaka (going south) and Morioka (going north). Anything shorter and Shinkansen is a win, anything further and Shinkansen is slower but still wins in comfort and convenience.
      Airplanes are fast, but cramped, so they definitely won't win on quality unless you splurge for business/first class. The thing that really kills airplanes though is *airports*. Train stations are fast plentiful and easy, airports are slow, cumbersome, and are frequently a pain to get to.

  • @DERP_Squad
    @DERP_Squad Před 4 lety +16

    Last time I was this early, I was sacked for not keeping to the timetable.

  • @searlecom1
    @searlecom1 Před 4 lety

    Top tip for travelling on the Shinkansen, get to the station early! The 24-second average late-running train figure includes delays for bad weather (snow etc) and other faults. If the train is late more than five minutes you will be offered a card to say the train was late, for when the boss asks why you are late. The train drivers announce to themself, out loud, how many seconds they are late or early when passing through stations they are not stopping at.

  • @Eurobazz
    @Eurobazz Před 4 lety +12

    You’re not sad Simon. You’re in good company with us ferroequinoligists.

  • @japanesesmiles8515
    @japanesesmiles8515 Před 4 lety

    Fantastic shinkansen video! Thank you very much for showing!🌸 😊🇯🇵

  • @graylinshowell7051
    @graylinshowell7051 Před 4 lety +9

    America should just build a train system called the super duper missile so we'll actually fund it.

    • @TallifTallonbrook
      @TallifTallonbrook Před 4 lety +1

      wont matter either way. The distances are what kills it. If you wanted the high speed rail of Kentucky it would be up to Kentucky to build it. Japan is 145,883 square miles, about the same size as Montana at 147k. Its population however is 126,479,781 to equal that you have to put the populations of California, Texas, Florida, New York, Pennsylvania, Illinois, and Ohio. The actual use of such a train could not pay for the distance it has to cover. Currently to build a rail capable of freight is is 2 million a mile. You can easily triple that for a high speed rail. Not taking into account acquiring the land it was going across.

  • @climkilla
    @climkilla Před 4 lety +4

    I've had the joy of travelling on both the shinkansen and the CRH (China Railway high speed) and I gotta say while the shinkansen is that slight bit more comfortable, the CRH is more incredible. The price for what they deliver is unbelievable. A ticket for a 300km journey is about EUR 15 in first class. The equivalent on the shinkansen would be nearly 4 times that in "scum" class. Added to the speed the Chinese are adding to their network it's just awe inspiring.

  • @ybing
    @ybing Před 4 lety +4

    Still remember my experience on the Chinese High Speed Rail, delaysssss, it was raining and it did 80 km/h for the entire hour...

    • @wyw201
      @wyw201 Před 4 lety

      Which line was this?

    • @slomo4672
      @slomo4672 Před 4 lety

      When was that?

    • @ybing
      @ybing Před 4 lety +1

      @@slomo4672 2011 when they still run at top speed 350 km/h, I took it from Wuhan back to Shenzhen; not long after departed Wuhan, it rain quite heavily so the entire section was running at 80 km/h...

  • @steelerfaninperu
    @steelerfaninperu Před 4 lety +2

    Loved this, I just got back from Japan and this is 100% accurate. It is a marvelous system. And it's worth noting that it blends seamlessly into the local rail networks (which are just as punctual) as your Shinkansen ticket gives you a free transfer upon arrival, so you simply go down a level and hop on the next train to your final destination.
    Oh, and you can drink and smoke on the train too. What's not to love?
    Frankly I think we should all as a globe designate the Japanese as the world's transport engineers. Let's just let them do it all for us.

  • @philipeanthonybattung3860

    Train week!!! YAY

    • @craigyami
      @craigyami Před 4 lety +2

      Im trying to get him do the concept of the transcontinental railroad/ Bering Sea bridge its is a pretty cool concept

  • @Bobrogers99
    @Bobrogers99 Před 3 lety +1

    In the US, the nearest thing we have to a high-speed passenger train is the Acela from Boston to New York (66mph) to Washington, DC (82mph). If this were to be replaced with a train at triple the speed (say, 210mph), it would be a more efficient mode of travel than the many, many planes that fly between these cities. You have to factor in that the trains could run to city centers whereas travelers must trek up to an hour to get to the airports. Think of the zillions of gallons of fuel that would be saved. The trains might also reduce the number of cars that travel on I-95. Even if the electricity to run the train were to be generated by the filthiest coal-burning plant in the country, the benefit to the environment would be huge.
    The problem is that the route would be through the most densely-populated part of the US, and the cost of land taking would be enormous and the process difficult.

  • @craigyami
    @craigyami Před 4 lety +5

    Please do the transcontinental railroad/ Bering sea bridge

  • @sunjamm222
    @sunjamm222 Před 4 lety +1

    When I travel to Japan I use the Shinkansen all the time. What they forgot to say was that if the train is more than a couple of minute late you get a letter for been late. If ten or more minutes late, they refund your fare. Send a letter to your boss to say sorry and you get a free ticket next time. Plus if it still in use. The driver is taken off drving duties and given someting like hard labour for a month.

  • @rj7855
    @rj7855 Před 4 lety +7

    another idea for a subject on megaprojects: Chinese High-speed train network

    • @hagdore
      @hagdore Před 4 lety +3

      Another idea for a subject on Mega Projects: How China engineered a virus to destroy the world.
      Now there's a mega project for you.

    • @kiraasuka9943
      @kiraasuka9943 Před 4 lety +2

      @@hagdore or how Spanish flu destroyed the world by killing 30 million people.

    • @bonehand87
      @bonehand87 Před 4 lety

      You mean the high-speed train system they copied from japan to name it their own, network.

    • @jimjim9303
      @jimjim9303 Před 4 lety

      @@bonehand87 Copied, but do better lol.

    • @jimjim9303
      @jimjim9303 Před 4 lety

      @@kiraasuka9943 Spanish flu is actually "American flu".

  • @AB-zl4nh
    @AB-zl4nh Před 3 lety +2

    So let me get this right.
    This train is so damn fast, I could travel from London to Paris at the same time it takes me today to travel from West to East London? Fucking hell.

  • @InsomniaNest
    @InsomniaNest Před 4 lety +43

    Imagine the US funding something like this instead of war. Pathetic lmao

    • @AdmiralJT
      @AdmiralJT Před 4 lety

      They were working on it, but they had to burn down a bunch of California first a couple years ago... but theres too many other globalist agendas and crushing American Liberty to do first. Cant have the US being a becon for freedom world wide when everything is suppose to be under a one world government china style system...

    • @gunnarkaestle
      @gunnarkaestle Před 4 lety +3

      @@AdmiralJT I think the comparision between the US and China must be allowed: Whereas the US decides to pour hundreds of billions into the military-industrial complex, China invests hugely in long lasting infrastructure such as high speed rail and less into the military. Most of the lines will be marginally at best, but what is the difference to the Interstate System? This is also a piece of infrastructure all citizens pay for and there is a common benefit in having the infrastructure, even if I don't use it directly.

    • @drscopeify
      @drscopeify Před 4 lety +1

      @@gunnarkaestle Japan has very urban population, most people live in large cities while in the US most people do not live in the large cities but the suburban sprawl making public transportation almost impossible. There is allot of light rail being built all over the US and that is the financially right way to achieve an alternative to driving but it is mostly just students and elderly or poor who end up using it as office workers prefer to freedom to go shopping or hit the gym on the way home from work. In all reality Americans are very busy bodies always going somewhere so public transportation has a really limited user base outside of a big city like NYC or LA.

    • @gunnarkaestle
      @gunnarkaestle Před 4 lety +1

      @@drscopeify Tram lines are for local transportation, but high speed rail is for connection major population centers. In my view, electrification either via light rail or electric vehicles will be a consequence of declining oil reserves and CO2 emission limitations. This issue here is about high speed rail, thus you should ask yourself how to get to the next airport or train station. Could be a taxi, park & ride or friend & family. "Americans are very busy bodies" - wouldn't it be better to use this business by working something or spending time with friend & family instead of sitting behind the wheel. This is of course a cultural phenomenon, but that may change with time as well, just look back 100 years. See also: The End of Suburbia czcams.com/video/Q3uvzcY2Xug/video.html

  • @laranaarana
    @laranaarana Před 4 lety +1

    Every time I travel to Japan with my family to visit relatives we always use the Shinkansen. In order to safe time on the turn around time (that is when the train needs to head on the oposite direction) the seats turn around. My daugthers love it every time we use it (even though is quite pricey).

  • @joheyjonsson2825
    @joheyjonsson2825 Před 4 lety +3

    Simon: "They're beautiful, they're fast, they're safe, and they're reliable"
    Me: *cries in Swedish'

    • @andrewjones-productions
      @andrewjones-productions Před 3 lety +1

      Actually, there was a fatality, Not the fault of JR or the Shinkansen but some crazy lunatic decided to cut the throat of someone's neck on the Tokaido line back in 2019. Furthermore, a derailment also happened at the time of the Tohoku earthquake on March 11th, 2011. Although, I don't think anyone is going to criticise a derailment due to a major earthquake that was so strong that it shifted the earth's axis and moved Japan 2 metres closer towards the North American continent.

  • @JourneysADRIFT
    @JourneysADRIFT Před 4 lety +2

    I remember riding on the Nozomi and thinking to myself how underwhelming it was, because despite hauling ass down the track I could barely hear or feel anything, yet an american passenger train feels like it's going to kill you at 30mph. Really amazing engineering.

  • @dklgdveje
    @dklgdveje Před 4 lety +11

    9:57 this is a 3d animation made by mustard channel, you should give it credit

    • @mattm7220
      @mattm7220 Před 4 lety

      Literally came down to the comments to see if anyone else had noticed this exact thing

  • @dickJohnsonpeter
    @dickJohnsonpeter Před 4 lety +2

    Oh cool, I've road this when I was deployed to Japan in the Air Force. You're right it's a smooth ride; it's hard to tell how fast you're going.

  • @uchihasniper2003
    @uchihasniper2003 Před 4 lety +5

    Hey simon maybe cover the explosion of high speed train in china?

    • @DirtyRobot
      @DirtyRobot Před 4 lety

      Why? It's just German and Japanese tech bought and stolen by the CCP.

    • @AllGuitarSucks
      @AllGuitarSucks Před 4 lety

      I remember that they bury their train accident

    • @gwo-shyanhan1188
      @gwo-shyanhan1188 Před 4 lety

      @@DirtyRobot you mean the Japanese invented trains??? 😂😂

  • @DannStephen
    @DannStephen Před 4 lety +1

    If you are a visitor to Japan, you can buy a JR rail pass. in 2016 I pay £160 for a week long pass that included 1st class (Green class) travel on the Shinkansen. I made a trip from Tokyo to Kyoto and then on to Hiroshima, followed by a trip back to Tokyo. To buy tickets for that trip was approx £300.