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S-train - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

S-train

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

S-train
Locale Metropolitan Copenhagen
Transit type Commuter rail
Began operation 1934
No. of lines 7 with 7 services
No. of stations 85
Daily ridership 240,000 daily (approximately)
Track gauge 1,435 mm (4 ft 8½ in)
Operator(s) DSB S-tog

The S-train (Danish: S-tog) network is the commuter train network of Metropolitan Copenhagen, Denmark. It connects the city center with the suburbs of Copenhagen. The first line was built in 1934. Today the network forms the heart of the public transportation infrastructure in the city, serving more than 240,000 passengers a day. It is entirely owned and run by DSB S-tog A/S.

The system is complemented by the Copenhagen Metro and an extensive bus network. Although owned by different companies, all three systems use interchangeable tickets. Most of the city's bus terminals are located adjacent to an S-train station.

In the city center, the trains run below ground level with one underground station. Outside the inner city it runs in the open, often on embankments. Although the S-trains run parallel to the regional/intercity mainline tracks between Høje Taastrup and Klampenborg, they have their own separate trackage all the way with different signalling and power standards from the mainline tracks. A handful of track connections between S-train and mainline tracks exist but are used only in special circumstances (mostly by maintenance vehicles).


Contents

[edit] Network

The network consists of a central section that splits into three radial lines at each end. The southern radials are

The northern radials are

The six radials are additionally connected by

See articles about each of the seven components for station lists and service patterns.

[edit] Services

The current timetable (Septemper 2007) organizes the trains on the network into 7 services, each with a letter designation. Most services run from about 05.00 to about 01.00 each day, with a train every 10 minutes in daylight hours and one every 20 minutes in the early morning and evening/night, and on Sundays. Exceptions are service F, which runs twice as often as the others; service H, which runs every 20 minutes all day; and service Bx, which runs in peak hours only.

Some services (E, H and Bx) skip certain stops to provide faster travel time, but no trains skip stops inside the ring line.

Name Southern end Runs when Northern end
A all stops to Hundige Køgebugtbanen All week, all day Hareskovbanen all stops to Farum
B all stops to Høje Taastrup Vestbanen All week, all day Nordbanen all stops to Holte
Bx limited stops to Høje Taastrup Vestbanen Mo-Fr, rush hour Hareskovbanen limited stops to Farum
C all stops to Ballerup,
every second train continues to Frederikssund
Frederikssundbanen Mo-Sa, daytime Klampenborgbanen all stops to Klampenborg
all stops to Ballerup All other times
E limited stops to Hundige, then all stops to Køge Køgebugtbanen All week, all day Nordbanen limited stops to Holte, then all stops to Hillerød
F all stops to Ny Ellebjerg Ringbanen All week, all day Ringbanen all stops to Hellerup
H limited stops to Frederikssund Frederikssundbanen All week, all day (terminates at Østerport)

Before 2007, the timetable followed a principle that each named line would run on a strict 20-minute schedule. In periods where more than 3 trains an hour were needed, the extra trains would be given separate service designations; for example there was a service B+ which ran on the same route as B, but only in the daytime and with its departure times offset 10 minutes from B.

Earlier timetables also had express services that skipped stops inside the ring line.

[edit] Technical overview

Valby station with 4th-generation S-train
Valby station with 4th-generation S-train
2nd generation S-train from 1971.
2nd generation S-train from 1971.

The S-trains run on standard gauge railway tracks and are powered by overhead wires. The voltage is variously quoted as 1500 or 1650 volts DC (negative overhead wire), indicating that it varies considerably with the loading and distance from a feeder station. Power is drawn from the national grid through 38 feeder stations spread around the network. The feeder stations have to be relatively close to each other because the large currents in the overhead wires (caused by the relatively low voltage) would lead to unacceptably large transmission losses otherwise.

The primary signalling system is a fixed-block cab signalling system called HKT which transmits data to the trains through low-bandwidth audio frequency induction loops between the rails. Different frequency combinations encode different target speeds; when a train enters a block with a lower target speed than its current speed it will initiate a service braking until the two match. This allows blocks to be much shorter than the full-speed braking distance, but as the braking profile is encoded in the transmitted target speed it only works where all trains have similar braking characteristics.

Lineside light signals are also provided for use in case of HKT failures or the occasional visit of a non-S-train, but the lineside blocks are longer, so capacity in this mode is reduced. Together with the finished ring-line, the exact train positions are now visible on all lines in Byens puls (see links below).

The trains are 8-car articulated units (DSB class SA-SD) supplied by Linke-Hofmann-Busch/Siemens. The cars are shorter than conventional railway cars; each has a single axle under one end of the car; the other end is supported by the neighbouring car. (The end cars are exceptions and have two axles each). The units have automatic scharfenberg couplers at the ends; in peak hours most trains consist of two coupled units. There are also a small number of 4-car units (class SE-SH) that can run solo in low-traffic intervals.

Trains of an older and more conventional design (DSB class MM-FU-MU-FS, built 1967-1978, and FC-MC-MC-FC, built 1985-1986) ran until January 7, 2007. All MM units have been retired and scrapped except for a few set aside for museum use; the MC units are currently being scrapped at Holbæk harbour. An official ceremony was held February 3, 2007 with the last ride of the 2nd generation S-trains. One of the spared museum trains will hopefully be prepared by DJK (Danish Railroad Club), who now are the owners of the train, and will eventually make its way to the tracks again on special occasions such as anniversaries.

[edit] Origin of the name

The letter S in "S-train" does not abbreviate any particular word. It originates in hexagonal illuminated "S" signs which were put up at stations some time before the opening of the first electrified lines in 1934. These signs may have been inspired by similar signs at the S-Bahn systems in Hamburg and Berlin, but their official purpose seems to have been to mark the location of a Station.

In February-March of 1934, the newspaper Politiken asked its readers to coin a name for the new system of commuter trains. "S-train" was the winning proposal, made independently by several readers. The judges' panel (headed by the director-general of the DSB) cited a long list possible expansions in their motivation, including choices such as "state railways", "city railway", "Greater Copenhagen", "sun", "lake", "forest", "beach", "snow", "skiing", "skating", "sleigh", all of which start with an S in Danish. (It shows that the initial marketing of the S-trains emphasized recreational day trips from the city to the countryside).

[edit] See also

[edit] External links


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