China Railway NZJ
The NZJ "Lushan", also registered as the NZJ1 are a class of diesel multiple unit of China Railway. These sets were built by Tangshan Locomotive in a 2M2T layout of four cars with Cummins diesel engines and Siemens electrical equipment. Three sets were built in total between 1998 and 2000, with two operated by [China Railway Nanchang railway station|Nanchang Group|Nanchang Railway Bureau] and one by Kunming Railway Bureau.
Development history
Background
From the mid-1990s, short distance and intercity services saw great decreases in passenger volume, due to competition from highways. To win back patronage on mid to short distance journeys, the Tangshan Locomotive with the support of the Ministry of Railways technological development department and China Railways Locomotive Company, started developing a new DMU in 1996, designed for intercity transport. In April 1997, the first such vehicle was rolled out at Tangshan Locomotive, an electrical transmission DMU, for Harbin Railway Bureau. Afterwards, the designers started work for a double deck DMU design, which would become the NZJ class DMU.Service history
In May 1998, Tangshan Locomotive completed the development of the first double-decker diesel multiple unit; on the 22 and 23 of the same month, the set underwent running in on the Beijing–Qinhuangdao railway and the Beijing–Chengde railway, which also included a safety test, with the highest speed reached in the test being. It was presented on 29 May 1998 at Tangshan Locomotive. It was handed over to Nanchang Railway Bureau on 5 June. Operation began on 18 June after it was named "Lushan", carrying passengers on the intercity service form Nanchang to Jiujiang, taking around 1.5 hours for the journey, faster than the two hours by coach. This led to the increase of passenger train traffic, and the set became a symbol for the newer generation of trains that would serve the railways and it was featured on train tickets. The second set was completed by Tangshan Locomotive in November 1999, and handed over to Nanchang Bureau. However, due to the short period of development and testing, the service of these sets revealed multiple flaws, and they had a very poor reliability. Due to this, Nanchang Bureau only paid about 40% of the fees for the set, with the rest being withheld due to the quality issues. After 1999, when Nanchang Bureau bought the more conventional but simpler to operate NYJ1 locomotive hauled passenger trains, the use of the NZJ sets was reduced to mainly running services during peak periods, such as the Chunyun period. Up until 2005, the NZJ still ran N621/622 from Nanchang to Yushan and N629/630, from Nanchang to Jingdezhen.After 2006, the NZJ were stored at Nanchang depot. They were formally deregistered in August 2011, with tenders for the sale of the sets for scrapping being posted. Both sets were scrapped by the end of the year.
Derivative vehicles
A third NZJ set, designated NZJ1-0002 was originally completed in March 2000 as part of an order of two from Jitong railway. However, for reasons unknown, the set was not accepted, and the order was switched to 25G carriages instead. It is also unknown whether the second car in the order was ever constructed. This set was eventually purchased by Kunming Railway Bureau and underwent a refurbishment at Tangshan Locomotive in August 2004, and was handed over in the first half of 2005, entering service in September.Although the car was later designated with the prefix SWX, the equipment for it, such as infrared scanners, were never installed. It continued to run as a passenger vehicle in either intercity or tourist services, depending on the source although the set spent much of the time as a parked at Kunming depot. It underwent a repair at Kunming in April 2007.
The main differences of this third set was that instead of a all hard seat layout, it has a hard sleeper and a soft sleeper car, along with two hard seat cars. As it was ordered for a different bureau, the paint of the set is somewhat different. It also had a different bogie for the trailers and differences in the location of car doors.
This set did not serve long, exiting service in 2011, then formally withdrawn in 2012, and has been stored near since 2014.