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Mito Line

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Japanese railway line
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Mito Line
AnE501 series EMU between Kasama and Shishido stations in March 2014
Overview
Native name水戸線
StatusOperational
LocaleTochigi,Ibaraki prefectures
Termini
Stations16
Service
TypeHeavy rail
Operator(s)Logo of the East Japan Railway Company (JR East)JR East
Rolling stockE501 series/E531 series EMUs
History
Opened16 January 1889; 136 years ago (16 January 1889)
Technical
Line length50.2 km (31.2 mi)
Track gauge1,067 mm (3 ft 6 in)
Electrification20 kV, 50 Hz AC (overhead catenary)
Route map


Oyama
Crossings' details
Kishapoppo-dori
Prefectural Road 33
Nishinire River
Otabayashi
Crossings' details
2x
Prefectural Road 17
Yūki
3x
Higashi-Yūki
Crossings' details
2x
Kawashima
Crossings' details
Prefectural Road 304
2x
Tamado
Crossings' details
3x
Shimodate
Crossings' details
Prefectural Road 7
Prefectural Road 14
2x
Kyowakosen Bridge
2x
4x
Niihari
Crossings' details
2x
Kannon River
3x
Yamato
Crossings' details
2x
Sakura River
3x
Prefectural Road 41
2x
Iwase
Crossings' details
2x
2x
3x
Haguro
Crossings' details
3x
Prefectural Road 64
Fukuhara
Crossings' details
Inada River
Inada River
2x
Inada
Crossings' details
2x
Fruits Line
Kasama
Crossings' details
Prefectural Road 42
5x
Shishido
3x
Tomobe
This diagram:

TheMito Line (水戸線,Mito-sen) is a railway line connectingOyama Station inTochigi Prefecture and Tomobe Station inIbaraki Prefecture, Japan. The line is 50.2 km (31.2 mi) long and is owned and operated by theEast Japan Railway Company (JR East).

Joban LineE501 series andE531 series ten car sets continue on to Iwaki, Fukushima while the 5 car sets go to Oyama. They separate at Tomobe.

Services are often run asone-man trains.

Station list

[edit]
  • All trains stop at every station.[1]
  • Trains can pass one another at stations marked "◇" and "∨" and cannot pass at stations marked "|".
StationJapaneseDistance (km)Transfers Location
Between
stations
Total
Oyama小山-0.0Tōhoku Shinkansen
JUTōhoku Main Line (Utsunomiya Line)
JSShonan-Shinjuku Line
Ryomo Line
OyamaTochigi
Otabayashi小田林4.94.9 YūkiIbaraki
Yūki結城1.76.6 
Higashi-Yūki東結城1.78.3 
Kawashima川島2.110.4 Chikusei
Tamado玉戸2.112.5 
Shimodate下館3.716.2Mooka Railway Mooka Line
Jōsō Line
Niihari新治6.122.3 
Yamato大和3.625.9 Sakuragawa
Iwase岩瀬3.729.6 
Haguro羽黒3.232.8 
Fukuhara福原4.237.0 Kasama
Inada稲田3.140.1 
Kasama笠間3.243.3 
Shishido宍戸5.248.5 
Tomobe友部1.750.2Jōban Line (some through services forMito)

Rolling stock

[edit]
  • A 5-car E501 series EMU on the Mito Line in December 2008
    A 5-car E501 series EMU on the Mito Line in December 2008
  • A 5-car E531 series EMU on the Mito Line in March 2015
    A 5-car E531 series EMU on the Mito Line in March 2015

Former rolling stock

[edit]
  • A 4-car 415-1500 series EMU on the Mito Line in March 2016
    A 4-car 415-1500 series EMU on the Mito Line in March 2016

History

[edit]
This sectionneeds additional citations forverification. Please helpimprove this article byadding citations to reliable sources in this section. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.(January 2013) (Learn how and when to remove this message)

The Mito Railway Co. opened the line on 16 January 1889[3] operating between Oyama andMito Stations. On 1 March 1892, the Mito Railway Co. merged with theNippon Railway.

On 1 July 1895, theJoban Line was opened by the Nippon Railway, joining the Mito Line at Tomobe Station. The company was nationalised in 1906.[citation needed]

On 12 October 1909, the Japanese Government Railways renamed the Tomobe to Mito section as part of the Joban Line, resulting in the current "Mito Line" being the section between Oyama and Tomobe.[citation needed]

The line was completely electrified on 1 February 1967.[citation needed]

Former connecting lines

[edit]
The former handcar line to Kasama Inari shrine

Kasama Station: A 1.4 km610 mm (2 ft) gauge handcar line to the Kasama Inari shrine operated between 1915 and 1930.[citation needed]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Mito Line Timetable".
  2. ^JR車両ファイル2016 [JR Rolling Stock File 2016].Japan Railfan Magazine (in Japanese). Vol. 56, no. 663. Japan: Koyusha Co., Ltd. July 2016. p. 18.
  3. ^日本国有鉄道停車場一覧 [JNR Station Directory]. Japan: Japanese National Railways. 1985. p. 111.ISBN 4-533-00503-9.

External links

[edit]
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