313 series
313 series | |
---|---|
In service | 1999–Present |
Manufacturer | Kinki Sharyo, Nippon Sharyo, Tokyu Car Corporation[1] |
Replaced | 103 series, 113 series, 115 series, 117 series, 119 series, 165 series |
Constructed | 1999–2014, 2019 |
Entered service | May 1999 |
Number built | 541 vehicles |
Number in service | 539 vehicles |
Number scrapped | 2 vehicles (accident damage) |
Formation | 2/3/4/6 cars per trainset |
Operators | JR Central |
Depots | Ōgaki, Jinryō, Shizuoka |
Lines served | |
Specifications | |
Car body construction | Stainless steel |
Doors | 3 pairs per side |
Maximum speed | 130 km/h (81 mph) (313-8000 series) 120 km/h (75 mph) (other series) |
Traction system | IGBT-VVVF |
Electric system(s) | 1,500 V DC (overhead catenary) |
Current collector(s) | Pantograph |
Braking system(s) | Electronically controlled pneumatic brakes with regenerative or dynamic braking, snow-resistant brake |
Safety system(s) | ATS-ST, ATS-PT |
Coupling system | Shibata Type |
Multiple working | 211/213/311 series |
Track gauge | 1,067 mm (3 ft 6 in) |
The 313 series (Japanese: 313系, Hepburn: 313-kei) is a DC suburban electric multiple unit (EMU) train type operated by Central Japan Railway Company (JR Central) in Japan since 1999.
The design was introduced from spring 1999 to replace older 113 and 115 series EMUs.[2]
Variants
[edit]Series | Formation | Line(s) used |
---|---|---|
313-0 series | 4-car | Tōkaidō Main Line (Toyohashi – Maibara) |
313-300 series | 2-car | |
313-1000 series | 4-car | Chūō Main Line (Nagoya – Nakatsugawa) |
313-1300 series | 2-car | Tōkaidō Main Line |
313-1500 series | 3-car | Chūō Main Line (Nagoya – Nakatsugawa) Kansai Main Line (Nagoya – Kameyama) |
313-1600 series | ||
313-1700 series | Iida Line, Chūō Main Line, Kansai Main Line | |
313-2300 series | 2-car | Tōkaidō Main Line, Gotemba Line, Minobu Line |
313-2350 series | ||
313-2500 series | 3-car | Tōkaidō Main Line (Atami – Toyohashi) |
313-2600 series | Tōkaidō Main Line, Gotemba Line, Minobu Line | |
313-3000 series | 2-car | Kansai Main Line, Chūō Main Line Gotemba Line, Minobu Line |
313-3100 series | Gotemba Line, Minobu Line | |
313-5000 series | 6-car | Tōkaidō Main Line (Toyohashi – Ōgaki) |
313-5300 series | 2-car | Tōkaidō Main Line |
313-8000 series | 3-car | Chūō Main Line (Nagoya – Nakatsugawa) (1999–2022)
Tōkaidō Main Line (2022–present) |
313-0 series
[edit]15 x 4-car sets (60 vehicles) built by Kinki Sharyo, Nippon Sharyo, and Tokyu Car Corporation between July and September 1999 with flip-over transverse seating.[3]
4-car Ōgaki sets Y1 to Y15
[edit]Designation | Mc | T | M | Tc' |
---|---|---|---|---|
Numbering | KuMoHa 313 | SaHa 313 | MoHa 313 | KuHa 312 |
313-300 series
[edit]16 x 2-car sets (32 vehicles) built by Kinki Sharyo, Nippon Sharyo, and Tokyu Car Corporation in September 1999 with flip-over transverse seating.[3]
2-car Ōgaki sets Y31 to Y46
[edit]Designation | Mc | Tc' |
---|---|---|
Numbering | KuMoHa 313-300 | KuHa 312-300 |
313-1000 series
[edit]3 x four-car and 3 x two-car sets (21 vehicles) built by Nippon Sharyo and Tokyu Car Corporation between February and March 1999 with flip-over transverse seating.[1]
A further seven 4-car sets, J1 to J7, were delivered from Nippon Sharyo to Ōgaki depot between August and October 2010.[4]
A further three 4-car sets, J8 to J10, were delivered in 2014.[5]
4-car Jinryō sets B1 to B5
[edit]B1 to B3
[edit]Designation | Mc | T | M | Tc' |
---|---|---|---|---|
Numbering | KuMoHa 313-1000 | SaHa 313-1000 | MoHa 313-1000 | KuHa 312 |
B4 to B5
[edit]Designation | Mc | T | M | Tc' |
---|---|---|---|---|
Numbering | KuMoHa 313-1100 | SaHa 313-1100 | MoHa 313-1100 | KuHa 312-400 |
4-car Ōgaki sets J1 to J7
[edit]Designation | Mc | T | M | Tc' |
---|---|---|---|---|
Numbering | KuMoHa 313-1100 | SaHa 313-1100 | MoHa 313-1100 | KuHa 312-400 |
3-car Jinryō sets B101 to B107
[edit]B101 to B103
[edit]Designation | Mc | M | Tc' |
---|---|---|---|
Numbering | KuMoHa 313-1500 | MoHa 313-1500 | KuHa 312 |
B104 to B107
[edit]Designation | Mc | M | Tc' |
---|---|---|---|
Numbering | KuMoHa 313-1600 | MoHa 313-1600 | KuHa 312-400 |
3-car Jinryō sets B151 to B153
[edit]Designation | Mc | M | Tc' |
---|---|---|---|
Numbering | KuMoHa 313-1700 | MoHa 313-1700 | KuHa 312-400 |
Interior
[edit]-
Interior view, September 2021
-
General seats, September 2021
-
Priority seats, September 2021
-
Priority seats (longitudinal), January 2022
-
Toilet, September 2021
313-1300 series
[edit]4 x 2-car 4th-batch sets (8 vehicles) were built by Nippon Sharyo in June 2010. The sets are numbered B401 to B404 and allocated to Jinryō depot. All cars feature flip-over transverse seating.[6][7] A further four 2-car sets, numbered B501 to B504, were delivered from Nippon Sharyo to Jinryō depot on 3 August 2011.[8]
2-car Jinryō sets B401–B404, B501–B504
[edit]Designation | Tc' | Mc |
---|---|---|
Numbering | KuHa 312-1300 | KuMoHa 313-1300 |
313-2000 series
[edit]9 x 2-car and 27 x 3-car sets (99 vehicles) built by Kinki Sharyo and Nippon Sharyo between November 2006 and February 2007 with longitudinal seating.[3]
2-car Shizuoka sets W1 to W9
[edit]W1–W2
[edit]Designation | Mc | Tc' |
---|---|---|
Numbering | KuMoHa 313-2350 | KuHa 312-2300 |
W3–W9
[edit]Designation | Mc | Tc' |
---|---|---|
Numbering | KuMoHa 313-2300 | KuHa 312-2300 |
3-car Shizuoka sets T1 to T17
[edit]Designation | Mc | M | Tc' |
---|---|---|---|
Numbering | KuMoHa 313-2500 | MoHa 313-2500 | KuHa 312-2300 |
3-car Shizuoka sets N1 to N10
[edit]Designation | Mc | M | Tc' |
---|---|---|---|
Numbering | KuMoHa 313-2600 | MoHa 313-2600 | KuHa 312-2300 |
Interior
[edit]-
313-2000 series interior view showing longitudinal seating, January 2022
-
Toilet, January 2022
313-3000 series
[edit]12 x 2-car and 16 x 2-car sets (56 vehicles) with fixed transverse seating and longitudinal seating.[2]
2-car Shizuoka sets V1 to V14
[edit]V1–V12
[edit]Designation | Mc | Tc' |
---|---|---|
Numbering | KuMoHa 313-3000 | KuHa 312-3000 |
V13–V14
[edit]Designation | Mc | Tc' |
---|---|---|
Numbering | KuMoHa 313-3100 | KuHa 312-3100 |
2-car Jinryō sets B301 to B316
[edit]Designation | Mc | Tc' |
---|---|---|
Numbering | KuMoHa 313-3000 | KuHa 312-3000 |
Interior
[edit]-
313-3000 series interior view, January 2007
-
313-3000 series interior view, January 2007
313-5000 series
[edit]12 x 6-car sets (72 vehicles) were built by Nippon Sharyo in 2006 with flip-over transverse seating.[1] This was the first conventional (i.e. non-Shinkansen) rolling stock to feature yaw dampers between intermediate cars.[2]
Further (4th-batch) sets were delivered in 2010.[7]
Two cars—designated KuHa 312-5102 and MoHa 313-5402—were built in 2019[9] to replace KuHa 312-5002 and MoHa 313-5302, respectively. This follows an accident in which set Y102 was involved in 2017.[10]
6-car Ōgaki sets Y101 to Y113
[edit]Designation | Mc | T | M | T | M | Tc' |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Numbering | KuMoHa 313-5000 | SaHa 313-5300 | MoHa 313-5000 | SaHa 313-5000 | MoHa 313-5300 | KuHa 312-5000 |
Interior
[edit]-
313-5000 series interior view, January 2022
313-5300 series
[edit]One 2-car 4th-batch set was delivered in July 2010 with flip-over transverse seating.[4][7]
2-car Ōgaki set Z1
[edit]Designation | Mc | Tc' |
---|---|---|
Numbering | KuMoHa 313-5300 | KuHa 312-5000 |
313-8000 series
[edit]The 313-8000 series fleet consists of six 3-car sets (18 vehicles) with flip-over transverse seating, designed for use on Chūō Main Line Central Liner and Home Liner Nakatsugawa services and built by Kinki Sharyo and Nippon Sharyo between September 1999 and February 2001.[1] Although Central Liner services were discontinued in 2013, the trains continued to be used on Chūō Main Line local and rapid services until JR Central's 12 March 2022 timetable revision,[11] and were transferred from Jinryō to Shizuoka depot from then.[12] The sets were renumbered S1–S6 from B201–B206.[13] From 14 March of that year, the fleet was introduced onto Tōkaidō Main Line services.[14]
3-car Shizuoka sets S1 to S6
[edit]Designation | Mc | M | Tc' |
---|---|---|---|
Numbering | KuMoHa 313-8500 | MoHa 313-8500 | KuHa 312-8000 |
Interior
[edit]Passenger accommodation consists of flip-over transverse seating throughout. Fixed seating bays with tables are provided at the ends of each car.[11] Some cars are equipped with toilets.[11]
-
Interior view
-
End-car transverse seating bay
-
Priority seating with toilet
See also
[edit]- KiHa 25, diesel multiple unit counterpart
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d JR電車編成表 '07冬号 [JR EMU Formations – Winter 2007]. Japan: JRR. December 2006. ISBN 978-4-88283-046-7.
- ^ a b c "311系・313系 製作の背景と現在までの経緯" [311 & 313 series: Background and developments to present day]. Tetsudō Daiya Jōhō. 38 (304): 12–25. August 2009.
- ^ a b c JR電車編成表 2009夏 [JR EMU Formations – Summer 2009]. Japan: JRR. June 2009. ISBN 978-4-330-06909-8.
- ^ a b JR電車編成表 2011夏 [JR EMU Formations – Summer 2011]. Japan: JRR. May 2010. ISBN 978-4-330-21211-1.
- ^ JR電車編成表: 2021冬 [JR Train Formation Tables, Winter 2021] (in Japanese). Tōkyō: Kōtsū Shimbun. 2020. p. 361. ISBN 978-4-330-08220-2. OCLC 1223315028.
- ^ 313系1300番台が営業運転を開始 [313-1300 series enters revenue service]. Japan Railfan Magazine Online (in Japanese). Koyusha Co., Ltd. 4 July 2010. Archived from the original on 7 July 2010. Retrieved 6 July 2010.
- ^ a b c "313系4次車 (313 series 4th-batch sets)". Japan Railfan Magazine. 50 (594): 80–81. October 2010.
- ^ 313系1300番台が日本車輌から出場 [313-1300 series delivered from Nippon Sharyo]. Japan Railfan Magazine Online (in Japanese). Japan: Koyusha Co., Ltd. 4 August 2011. Archived from the original on 17 September 2011. Retrieved 6 August 2011.
- ^ Miyashita, Takahiro (14 September 2019). "313系2両が陸送される" [Two 313 series cars to be transported by land]. Japan Railfan Magazine Online (in Japanese). Japan: Koyusha Co., Ltd. Archived from the original on 12 November 2019. Retrieved 4 December 2021.
- ^ "JR東海道線で電車と車が衝突する踏切事故 車が炎上し運転手の男性が死亡、列車が脱線し一部区間で運転見合わせ続く" [Railroad crossing accident where JR Tokaido Line train and car collide…]. MoreNews. Archived from the original on 25 March 2017. Retrieved 4 December 2021.
- ^ a b c "JR東海313系、元「セントラルライナー」車両が静岡地区で営業運転" [JR Central 313 series, former "Central Liner" vehicle is now active in the Shizuoka area]. Mynavi News (in Japanese). 17 March 2022. Retrieved 21 March 2022.
- ^ "313系8000番台が名古屋地区での定期運用を終了" [The 313-8000 series ends regular operation in Nagoya]. Japan Railfan Magazine Online (in Japanese). Koyusha Co., Ltd. 13 March 2022. Retrieved 14 March 2022.
- ^ 313系8000番代が静岡地区で運用開始 [313-8000 series begins operation in Shizuoka area]. RM News (in Japanese). Japan: Neko Publishing. 15 March 2022. Retrieved 10 February 2024.
- ^ "313系8000番台が静岡地区で営業運転を開始" [313-8000 series begins commercial operations in the Shizuoka area]. Japan Railfan Magazine Online (in Japanese). Koyusha Co., Ltd. 16 March 2022. Retrieved 16 March 2022.
External links
[edit]- JR Central 313 series information (in Japanese)