Crack found in Japanese bullet train

If the train had continued to run, the crack could have caused it to derail in the worst-case scenario, transport officials said.

Update: 2017-12-13 19:57 GMT
For every kilometre to elevated or underground tunnel track, nearly about 10,000 mt of cement would be consumed. (Photo: Pixabay)

A crack has been found in a Japanese “bullet train” that could have caused a derailment, officials said on Wednesday, in the first-ever “serious incident” for the iconic mode of transport. Crew aboard a “shinkansen” bullet train reported a burning smell and strange noises when it pulled out of a station in southern Japan on Monday. The train stopped for checks at Nagoya station in central Japan and inspectors discovered a crack in the chassis under one carriage as well as an oil leak.

If the train had continued to run, the crack could have caused it to derail in the worst-case scenario, transport officials said. About 1,000 passengers aboard were unhurt and they continued their journey on fresh trains. “We recognise it as a ‘serious incident’ as it was an extraordinary case... It could have led to an accident,” said an official at the Japan Transport Safety Board.

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