Jubilee Development - Flagship SGR project trial testing

An inaugural test run for the standard gauge railway (SGR) from Nairobi to Mombasa was carried out successfully using a passenger train. The passenger train left Nairobi at 9.30am and arrived at the Mombasa Marshaling yard at around 4.00pm. Speaking at the Mombasa marshaling yard (dubbed kilometer zero) at the Port of Mombasa, SGR Project Coordinator Johnson Matu said they were impressed with the initial test runs.

“The test runs were meant to determine the train’s performance ability on the new SGR track,” Eng Matu said. The maiden test drive trip from Nairobi to Mombasa covered a total of 472km with the first stop being at Mtito Andei for two hours and five minutes. A specialised compartment fitted with a computerised system, which is able to see condition of track and relay it to the computer system was among the compartments hauled by the locomotive on the maiden drive.

There was a two hour stoppage at Mtito Andei, which is the mid point of the 472km and included four coaches and two passenger locomotive engines of the DF 8B class. “We were cruising at a speed of 120km per hour from Nairobi up to Mtito Andei, where all the rail communication modern systems are in place,” he said. But after Mtito Andei, it took longer for the train to cruise since they opted to travel at much lower speeds since the signaling and communication system are yet to be complete. “Manual system to the clear the incoming trains was used. We have been duly informed that work on the upgrade between Mombasa and Mtito Andei will be completed by tomorrow (today),” he explained. On board the test drive passenger train were 21 rail experts from the SGR main consultant, TSDI–APEC–Edon Consortium, China Road and Bridges Corporation (CRBC), Kenya Railways management and staff, and engineers from manufacturers of the locomotives and coaches respectively. final touches Separately, Kenya Railways Managing Director Atanas Maina said in a separate interview that CRBC, TAEC and KR are undertaking completion acceptance tests. “This is a formal and critical process where the parties go through the critical process of testing whether the final product delivered, that is, both the infrastructure and equipment, meet the standards expected by the client,” Mr Maina said. He added that the test runs are for checking whether the locomotives, wagons and coaches will run on the track without hitches. Maina added that tests are also being done on the entire signaling systems to examine capacity to recognise moving trains. He added that the speeds, reception and the dispatch from the stations, passenger comfort among others were also being checked. We are pleased to state that the network and the equipment is responding awesomely well to the various tests, which will continue till May," he said.

So considering the 2 hour stop at Mtito Andei and the slower speed after that, the 472 km journey took 4 Hours and 25 Min

SGR Passenger train before starting trial test in Nairobi.I understand in real life its is huge, sleek and spacious than it looks in pictures.
http://i.imgur.com/Rj3Qj6Z.jpg
Mtito Andei Intermediate station - Mid point between Nairobi and Mombasa
https://scontent-atl3-1.xx.fbcdn.net/v/t1.0-9/17098495_1464874486878596_8816185622804910805_n.jpg?oh=81875cffa467e27b330ef873e1cdc309&oe=5938ED37
http://i.imgur.com/JCBXvgvh.jpg
http://i.imgur.com/cBzqIVrh.jpg

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KjiygYr-h9o

XI’AN - Carolyne Karugo and six other young women from Kenya have obtained their assistant train driver course certificates after a 50-day training in Northwest China’s Shaanxi province.

The seven, who got their certificates on Monday, are the first group of African female train drivers trained in China and are expected to start work in June when a rail line that links Kenya’s capital Nairobi with the port city of Mombasa opens.

The standard gauge railway stretching 480 km was designed for passenger trains running 120 km per hour and freight trains at 80 km per hour.

China financed 90 percent of the 3.8 billion U.S. dollar project, with work being carried out by the China Roads and Bridges Corporation (CRBC). Construction on the railway began in January 2015.

Being a key construction project under the China-proposed Belt and Road Initiative, the railway is the first new rail line built in Kenya in a century.

Before going to China, Carolyne, 26, was a tour guide in Kenya. She speaks fluent Chinese after attending the Confucius Institute in Nairobi and studying in north China’s Tianjin Municipality as an exchange student.

“A female train driver is more careful and will take more care of a train,” said Carolyne.

After the training, Carolyne said she had fully grasped operation standards, driving skills, as well as the overhaul and maintenance procedures of a China-made locomotive.

The training was co-organized by a railway technician college in Shaanxi, and the Southwest Jiaotong University.

As part of the project, the CRBC said that a batch of 60 freight trains had been transported to Mombasa. Seven Chinese teachers specializing in railway engineering have also left for Nairobi to conduct technical training for local railway personnel.

Figures show the railway project has created more than 38,000 jobs, 90 percent for local people.


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Our journalists must hate google, passenger locos are DF 11. DF 8B are freight locos and cannot do 120km/h

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4.5hrs that is impressive. it reminds me of the day we had Malindi and Takrim Coach that plied A109. wacha niingie SkyscraperCity nione wadau wanasemaje huko

Woooooi manegativos, where you gonna run to?

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@spear, I am a passionate admirer of this. However, I can’t deny that, although the work done is superb, one of the reasons why this architectural and technological marvel looks so marvelous is the fact that it’s all brand new. We will see how it will be 20 years from now. Perhaps, even the old line would still be a sight to behold if it underwent through routine and punctual maintenance and rehabilitation.

Google’s estimation of travel time on the 109:

[SIZE=5]8 h 19 min (483,6 km)[/SIZE] via Mombasa Road and Mombasa Road/A109

Even if the passenger SGR were to take 5.5 hours to get there, the advantage would be still worth some extra cash.

In fact, since the terminals are in the CBDs, the train would compete quite well with domestic airlines, which always leave you with sections to and from airports through heavy traffic.

Kusema ukweli kuna vile hizi trains zimeundwa kienyeji.