Keio 7000 series | |
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8-car 7000 series set
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In service | 1984–Present |
Number built | 190 vehicles |
Formation | 2/4/6/8/10 cars per trainset |
Operator(s) | Keio Corporation |
Specifications | |
Car body construction | Stainless steel |
Car length | 20 m (65 ft 7 in) |
Doors | 4 pairs per side |
Maximum speed | 110 km/h (70 mph) |
Acceleration | 2.5 km/h/s |
Deceleration | 4.0 km/h/s (4.5 km/h/s for emergency brake) |
Electric system(s) | 1,500 V DC |
Current collection method | Overhead |
Track gauge | 1,372 mm (4 ft 6 in) |
The Keio 7000 series (京王7000系?) is a Japanese electric multiple unit (EMU) commuter train type operated by the private railway operator Keio Corporation on commuter services in the western suburbs of Tokyo.
The body is stainless steel. Early sets used corrugated panels, while sets made after 1987 had a beaten style. (Some corrugated-style cars were made after 1987 as middle cars for sets made early in production.) The sides were not painted. Fronts of early sets were the same color as the sides. The front designs are of two types, but the difference is minor.
The driver's cab contains a "T"-shaped, one-handle master-controller system. The speedometer is analog, providing information up to 140 km/h (87 mph).
Driver's cab
Seating consists of longitudinal bench seats, arranged 4-7-7-7-4 in intermediate cars. Original sets have no passenger information displays, but refurbished sets feature 3-color LED information displays (four per car).
Interior of car in original condition
Inside of a refurbished car
Priority seats of car in original condition
Priority seats of a refurbished car
LED passenger information display
Used on all Keio Corporation lines.
The 7000 series began service in 1984. The 7000 series was built for local train service, and the first sets were five-car sets, rather than 4, 6 or 10 cars. The running performance of the new series was nearly the same as the Keio 6000 series. By 1996, 190 cars of the 7000 series had been built.
From 2001, 7000 series sets were introduced on Special Express, Semi Special Express, Express, and Rapid trains.
Keio announced in 2010 that 18 more of its 7000 series cars would be converted to VVVF inverter control.