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Facts you should know about
Indian Railways
Railways
were first introduced to India in 1853 from Bombay to
Thane. In 1951 the systems were nationalized as one unit,
the Indian Railways, becoming one of the largest networks
in the world and today Indian Railways is the world’s
ninth largest commercial or utility employer, by number of
employees, with over 1.4 million employees. Here are some
interesting facts about Indian
Railways:
Fastest
train in India: New Delhi-Bhopal Shatabdi Express is
the fastest train in India. The all air-conditioned
superfast train clocks a maximum speed of 150km/h on the
Faridabad-Agra section.
It also
has the highest commercial speed – 89.87 km/h- and covers
the 704 km New Delhi – Bhopal stretch in 7 hours 50
minutes.
Slowest
train in India: Metupalayam Ooty Nilgiri Passenger
which runs at a speed of 10kmph, 15 times slower than
fastest running train. Since this train runs in hilly
region there are speed limits to comply.
The one
that comes close is Pratapnagar-Jambusar passenger, with a
maximum speed of 12km/h and an average speed of 11km/h. It
takes 4 hrs for a journey of 44 km.
Trains
with most stops: The record for maximum number of
stops by an Express/Mail train is held by Howrah –
Amritsar Express 115 halts, followed by Delhi – Howrah
Janata Express 109 halts and Jammu Tawi – Sealdah Express
99 halts.
Junction
with most number of routes originating from it:
Mathura junction with 7 routes- Broad Gauge (BG) line to
Agra Cantt, BG line to Bharatpur, BG line to Alwar, BG
line to Delhi, Metre Gauge (MG) line to Achnera, MG line
to Vrindavan and MG line to Hathras, Kasganj.
Six route
junction – Bhatinda. Five route junctions – Lucknow,
Guntakal, Katni, Varanasi, Kanpur Central, Villupuram,
Dabhoi, and Nagpur.
Longest
Platform: Indian Railways owns the longest railway
platform in the world at Kharagpur (West Bengal) with a
length of 2,733 ft (1072.5 m) in
length.
First
Railroad: The first railroad was constructed by two
Indians (Jamsetjee Jeejeebhoy and Jaganath Shunkerseth)
and not the British.
Railway
Network: Though it is commonly believed, India doesn’t
have the largest railway network in the World. India comes
fourth with approx. 64,000 km of railroad after US,
Russia, and China.
If the
tracks were to be laid out from one point to another
around the equator, it would circle it one-and-a-half
times.
Distance
Covered: The total distance covered by the 14,300
trains daily on the Indian Railways daily equals three
& half times the distance to moon.
Worst
Rail Disaster: In the Bihar train disaster on June 6,
1981, a passenger train carrying 800 or more passengers
between Mansi and Saharsa, derailed and plunged into the
river Bagmati while it was crossing a bridge.
After five
days, more than 200 bodies were recovered, with hundreds
more missing that were feared washed away by the river.
Estimates of total deaths range from 500 to 800 or more.
It was the worst Indian rail disaster.
Passenger
Load: The Indian Railways (IR) carries over 25 million
passengers daily which is perhaps more than the entire
population of Australia, New Zealand and Tasmania put
together. Annually Indian Railways ferries 7.2 billion
passengers (nearly 6x India’s current
population). |