Traveling on China's Bullet trains
#1
Posted 07 January 2012 - 07:35 PM
Thanks.
#2
Posted 07 January 2012 - 11:04 PM
My father has expressed an interest in going to China and visiting Tsingtao which is now knows as Qingdao. I download an an Iphone app and determined that their is some sort of high speed train service from Beijing to Qingdao. I've researched the man in seat 61 website, and their info seems somewhat incomplete. Apparently one can only buy tickets in China 20 days or less before departure. The website also states that it is easy for one to buy tickets at the station. How easy is this? And how full do these trains run?
Thanks.
From my personal experience buying tickets is easier for Chinese than it is for non-Chinese speakers. In the major city stations generally there is only one window available for English language ticket purchases. Things have also changed very recently with the advent of the majority of ticket sales going online now. Doing it yourself with an international credit card also presents issues as the railway agency may or may not accept the card. Many places only take Chinese issued cards. There are "agencies" that would do the purchase for you but it drives up the cost. Unless he has his heart set on riding Chinese HSR I would recommend comparing the fee against a Chinese domestic airline ticket (use the website C-Trip). The stations also aren't the most western friendly and you are subject to airport style security when entering the rail station. It's not like it is here.
The one thing everyone needs to remember is that on forums such as this, all it takes is a computer, connection and the ability to hit a few keys and you can become an instant expert! Isn't technology great?
#3
Posted 08 January 2012 - 03:05 AM
#4
Posted 08 January 2012 - 09:31 AM
I hope you choose to take the HSR, and regale us with a trip report.
TRAVELED / WORKED: (Red = THIS year) MORR, Texas Eagle, Hiawatha Service, Palmetto, Carolinian, Maple Leaf, Adirondack, Cardinal, Auto-Train, Acela, Keystone Service, Surfliners, Coast Starlight, Empire Builder, NE Regionals, Capital Limited, City of New Orleans, Downeaster, Wolverine, Pere Marquete, Broadway Limited, Lake Shore Limited, North Coast Hiawatha, Illini, Dubuque Service, Super Chief, Cali Zephyr, Silver Star, Silver Meteor, Pioneer, Sunset Limited, San Diegans, Inter-American, Vermonter (to Amherst), Michigan Executive, Twilight Limited, Lake Cities, Niagara Rainbow, Crescent, Alaska RR, Ferromex: Laredo-Mexico City, Metro North, METRA, BART, LIRR, Boston's T, NYC Subway, Chicago's "L", DC Metro, SF Cable Cars-Trolleys, NJ Transit to AC, NOLA Street Cars, Ann Arbor RR Cross-Lake Ferry, Former C&O S.S. Badger Cross-Lake Ferry, Baltimore Light Rail, Via:The Ocean, Algoma Central...... TRAINS Over-Slept & MISSED: D&RGW, Southern Crescent (both Pre-Amtrak, Dammit!)
#6
Posted 09 January 2012 - 09:15 PM
#7
Posted 10 January 2012 - 09:11 AM
#10
Posted 13 January 2012 - 12:32 AM
Hi,
I found this report of a high speed ride in China: China HST
Ed
The guy who wrote that report is a friend of mine lol.
The one thing everyone needs to remember is that on forums such as this, all it takes is a computer, connection and the ability to hit a few keys and you can become an instant expert! Isn't technology great?
#11
Posted 13 January 2012 - 11:25 AM
Admittedly it was a few years back, but based on the experience of acquaintance of mine, and a Hong Kong resident, I would NOT ride an internal airline flight in China, unless it was a life and death issue or close to it. An internal train ride, no problem.
Can I ask why? In May I will be in China and will have the opportunity to ride 2 HSR lines as well as the bullet train to/from the Shanghai airport, but I'm set to fly between Beijing and Shanghai. It seems like its only a 90 minute flight, so I can't imagine it being a disaster.
Routes Traveled: Acela Express, Adirondack, Amtrak Cascades, California Zephyr, Capitol Limited, Cardinal, Carolinian, City of New Orleans, Coast Starlight, Crescent, Downeaster, Empire Service, Ethan Allen Express, Hiawatha, Keystone Corridor, Lake Shore Limited, Northeast Regional, Maple Leaf, Missouri River Runner, Pacific Surfliner, Pennsylvanian, Southwest Chief, Springfield Shuttles, Texas Eagle, Vermonter.
#14
Posted 14 January 2012 - 10:13 AM
The story was that the person was on a flight where for a while at cruise both pilots were out of the cockpit drinking coffee in the first class section, the comment being we have a very reliable autopilot so there is nothing to be concerned about. How common this is, I have no idea. This was something that happened 15 years ago, so take it all for what it is worth.Can I ask why? In May I will be in China and will have the opportunity to ride 2 HSR lines as well as the bullet train to/from the Shanghai airport, but I'm set to fly between Beijing and Shanghai. It seems like its only a 90 minute flight, so I can't imagine it being a disaster.
Admittedly it was a few years back, but based on the experience of acquaintance of mine, and a Hong Kong resident, I would NOT ride an internal airline flight in China, unless it was a life and death issue or close to it. An internal train ride, no problem.
#15
Posted 14 January 2012 - 01:46 PM
The accident rates for China air carriers are comparable to those of USA carriers. I would not put much stock in a report of a single incident from 15 years ago.The story was that the person was on a flight where for a while at cruise both pilots were out of the cockpit drinking coffee in the first class section, the comment being we have a very reliable autopilot so there is nothing to be concerned about. How common this is, I have no idea. This was something that happened 15 years ago, so take it all for what it is worth.
Can I ask why? In May I will be in China and will have the opportunity to ride 2 HSR lines as well as the bullet train to/from the Shanghai airport, but I'm set to fly between Beijing and Shanghai. It seems like its only a 90 minute flight, so I can't imagine it being a disaster.
Admittedly it was a few years back, but based on the experience of acquaintance of mine, and a Hong Kong resident, I would NOT ride an internal airline flight in China, unless it was a life and death issue or close to it. An internal train ride, no problem.
Sometimes there is confusion between airlines in China, and the airline "China Air". China Air went through a period where their safety record was awful and was blamed on lax standards. China Air is a Taiwan carrier, not a mainland China carrier.
Airline Accident Rates
#16
Posted 14 January 2012 - 09:15 PM
The one thing everyone needs to remember is that on forums such as this, all it takes is a computer, connection and the ability to hit a few keys and you can become an instant expert! Isn't technology great?
#17
Posted 14 January 2012 - 09:30 PM
Admittedly it was a few years back, but based on the experience of acquaintance of mine, and a Hong Kong resident, I would NOT ride an internal airline flight in China, unless it was a life and death issue or close to it. An internal train ride, no problem.
Can I ask why? In May I will be in China and will have the opportunity to ride 2 HSR lines as well as the bullet train to/from the Shanghai airport, but I'm set to fly between Beijing and Shanghai. It seems like its only a 90 minute flight, so I can't imagine it being a disaster.
You're referring to the maglev from Pudong Airport. I rode it out of necessity one night to pick up my sister there b/c Metro Line 2 stopped running to the airport before the maglev closed for the night. For what it is it wasn't worth the 50 Kwai considering you'd probably have to transfer to Metro Line 2 anyway to get to where the majority of the hotels are. Line 2 would cost under 5 Kwai for comparison. Looks flashy from the outside but the interior consists of cheap looking seats with bad seat covers. For what it costs I'd have expected better.
Domestic flights Shanghai to Beijing for the most part leave from Hongqiao Airport Terminal 2 (pretty much the same place as the HSR) and service between the two is very frequent. Metro Lines 2 and 10 service Hongqiao terminal 2. The flight wouldn't be a disaster and you'd even get a meal onboard unlike US domestic flights.
The one thing everyone needs to remember is that on forums such as this, all it takes is a computer, connection and the ability to hit a few keys and you can become an instant expert! Isn't technology great?
#18
Posted 16 January 2012 - 03:47 PM
Yes, I remember the CAL accidents. I was living in Taiwan at the time they happened. Given the circumstances of these crashes, they did not stop me from using them. In the 96-97 time frame, I was on a China Airlines flight a couple of times a month between Taipei and Hong Kong, and a couple years later took several flights between Singapore and Taipei. Last time I was on a CAL flight was a round trip about 18 months ago between San Francisco and Taipei.Sometimes there is confusion between airlines in China, and the airline "China Air". China Air went through a period where their safety record was awful and was blamed on lax standards. China Air is a Taiwan carrier, not a mainland China carrier.
Airline Accident Rates
#19
Posted 16 January 2012 - 05:23 PM
Admittedly it was a few years back, but based on the experience of acquaintance of mine, and a Hong Kong resident, I would NOT ride an internal airline flight in China, unless it was a life and death issue or close to it. An internal train ride, no problem.
Can I ask why? In May I will be in China and will have the opportunity to ride 2 HSR lines as well as the bullet train to/from the Shanghai airport, but I'm set to fly between Beijing and Shanghai. It seems like its only a 90 minute flight, so I can't imagine it being a disaster.
You're referring to the maglev from Pudong Airport. I rode it out of necessity one night to pick up my sister there b/c Metro Line 2 stopped running to the airport before the maglev closed for the night. For what it is it wasn't worth the 50 Kwai considering you'd probably have to transfer to Metro Line 2 anyway to get to where the majority of the hotels are. Line 2 would cost under 5 Kwai for comparison. Looks flashy from the outside but the interior consists of cheap looking seats with bad seat covers. For what it costs I'd have expected better.
Domestic flights Shanghai to Beijing for the most part leave from Hongqiao Airport Terminal 2 (pretty much the same place as the HSR) and service between the two is very frequent. Metro Lines 2 and 10 service Hongqiao terminal 2. The flight wouldn't be a disaster and you'd even get a meal onboard unlike US domestic flights.
Its kind of expensive, but its more a joy ride then a necessity I want to ride more for the experience of the speed and to ride on mag lev since I've not had that opportunity before. Thanks for the info on Air China.
Routes Traveled: Acela Express, Adirondack, Amtrak Cascades, California Zephyr, Capitol Limited, Cardinal, Carolinian, City of New Orleans, Coast Starlight, Crescent, Downeaster, Empire Service, Ethan Allen Express, Hiawatha, Keystone Corridor, Lake Shore Limited, Northeast Regional, Maple Leaf, Missouri River Runner, Pacific Surfliner, Pennsylvanian, Southwest Chief, Springfield Shuttles, Texas Eagle, Vermonter.
#20
Posted 16 January 2012 - 05:35 PM
Admittedly it was a few years back, but based on the experience of acquaintance of mine, and a Hong Kong resident, I would NOT ride an internal airline flight in China, unless it was a life and death issue or close to it. An internal train ride, no problem.
Can I ask why? In May I will be in China and will have the opportunity to ride 2 HSR lines as well as the bullet train to/from the Shanghai airport, but I'm set to fly between Beijing and Shanghai. It seems like its only a 90 minute flight, so I can't imagine it being a disaster.
You're referring to the maglev from Pudong Airport. I rode it out of necessity one night to pick up my sister there b/c Metro Line 2 stopped running to the airport before the maglev closed for the night. For what it is it wasn't worth the 50 Kwai considering you'd probably have to transfer to Metro Line 2 anyway to get to where the majority of the hotels are. Line 2 would cost under 5 Kwai for comparison. Looks flashy from the outside but the interior consists of cheap looking seats with bad seat covers. For what it costs I'd have expected better.
Domestic flights Shanghai to Beijing for the most part leave from Hongqiao Airport Terminal 2 (pretty much the same place as the HSR) and service between the two is very frequent. Metro Lines 2 and 10 service Hongqiao terminal 2. The flight wouldn't be a disaster and you'd even get a meal onboard unlike US domestic flights.
Its kind of expensive, but its more a joy ride then a necessity I want to ride more for the experience of the speed and to ride on mag lev since I've not had that opportunity before. Thanks for the info on Air China.
Then take it during daylight hours instead as they restrict the speed at night. Also, for the best domestic airfares in China check out C-Trip. Air China isn't the only airline that flies the Shanghai-Beijing route. China Eastern does as well as several others. I flew China Eastern several times and never had an issue on them and it is easier, faster and cheaper to get from downtown to SHA then PVG.
The one thing everyone needs to remember is that on forums such as this, all it takes is a computer, connection and the ability to hit a few keys and you can become an instant expert! Isn't technology great?
Reply to this topic
0 user(s) are reading this topic
0 members, 0 guests, 0 anonymous users











