The L0 Series train being developed by Japan currently is likely to reach speeds of up to 603.5kmh, making it the world’s ...
Behind more than 70 million high-speed rail services a year lies a web of safety systems. At nearly 200 mph, even a single failure can have dramatic consequences.
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Bullet trains and the race for speed
Bullet trains have become synonymous with speed, efficiency, and technological prowess. As countries like Japan and China push the boundaries of rail travel, the race for the fastest bullet train is ...
As of January 26, 2026, a new high-speed rail service—the G25—zips from Beijing South to Shanghai Hongqiao in just 4 hours and 18 minutes, making it the fastest train ever on the route. The catch?
In the modern age of travel, people expect to get where they need to go fast. This includes traveling by train, especially bullet trains, which can reach incredible speeds. If you live in Brazil, ...
Spain’s high-speed train network, the world’s second longest, is a national pride and joy. Whisking passengers across a large ...
The construction of what is intended to be the world’s fastest train, the Chuo Shinkansen Maglev, which is intended to link Tokyo to Nagoya, with a potential future extension to Osaka, is currently ...
Passengers are seen on the high-speed train G359 from Yan'an, northwest China's Shaanxi Province to the capital city of ...
Rep. Seth Moulton’s breezy cheerleading for California’s high-speed rail project in “America Should Travel Fast” (Letters, July 28) offers no persuasive reasons to persist in spending billions of ...
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