General information

23 November, 2024

Preserved Tokyu 8500 series – does it really last long?

On 2 August, Tokyu made a surprising announcement: an old train would be preserved and run mainline. Unlike the United Kingdom, preserving old trains for passenger service is rare in Japan so that the decision was welcomed by many railway enthusiasts. However, strict safety requirements are likely to prevent it from keeping the old train operational in the near future.


Tokyu 8500 series had been used mainly for Den-en-toshi Line including through-services towards Tokyo Metro Hanzomon Line and Tobu lines until last year. When the last unit retired on 23 January 2023, there were large groups of people sending off the old commuter train. Two days later, the unit was sent for scrap with hundreds of overexcited enthusiasts gathered at stations. Everyone thought that history of the 8500 series was over except a few units resold to small private operators in other parts of the country.

However, it was not over. Tokyu has decided to retain a unit (no. 8637), shortened from ten to four coaches. According to the official document, it will run Den-en-toshi and Oimachi Lines between Nagatsuta and Oimachi as well as Kodomonokuni Line. A four-car unit may sound short, but it is how the 8500 series looked like nearly 50 years ago. In fact, when it was introduced, Den-en-toshi Line services were not as extremely crowded as they are today.


The unit 8637 was introduced on 4 September 1986 (except the carriage 8980, which was introduced on 19 August 1987) so that it is quite different to the original 8500 series. Even so, quite a few railway enthusiasts asked Tokyu for the preservation. According to the company, the unit will run Kodomonokuni Line during high season, and it will also be used for rail tours.

The front end of carriage no. 8637 and right side of the train have blue bands, while the other side is the original style (only the front end of no. 8537 has a red band).


However, the preservation of the 8500 series is unlikely to last long. Tokyu plans to introduce CBTC (communications-based train control) to Den-en-toshi Line in 2028. The new signalling system requires a new device, but the cost is high. The unit will be unable to run when the CBTC is wholly implemented, meaning that it will only be able to run Kodomonokuni Line (which is just two miles long).

Furthermore, the overhaul certificate of the unit 8637 will expire in 2028. In Japan, a major overhaul is carried out once every four years (excluding those introduced recently as well as locomotives and bullet trains) unless an odometer records certain level of distance. Thus, it is highly uncertain if the unit can be operational on Kodomonokuni Line.


Japanese train operators are generally reluctant to preserve old trains, but this is mostly due to safety requirements. Unlike Britain, train companies and the authorities in Japan are highly dependent on computer-based safety systems rather than drivers' attention. The improvement that has taken place particularly since the mid-2000s have made the Japanese railways even safer, but it also made the train preservation even more difficult.

09 November, 2024

Isumi Railway: the safety crisis

Last month, an Isumi Railway train derailed in Chiba Prefecture due to poor track maintenance. The railway has been closed for more than a month, raising concerns about the safety and the future of the railway, but local governments would not allow it just to be abandoned.

NHK reported that a westbound train formed of two coaches derailed between Kuniyoshi and Kazusa-Nakagawa stations at around 8:10 am on 4th October. There were 104 passengers (mostly high school students) and a driver onboard, but nobody injured. The line has been closed since then and replaced by bus. The Japan Transport Safety Board has carried out an investigation and its report is expected to be published within weeks.

According to Asahi Shimbun, decayed sleepers made of wood could not fix the rail. The train company acknowledged the situation and thus planned repair work that would take place in late November, but the accident happened before that. The company initially envisaged reopening the line within four weeks, but according to Nikkei, too many decayed sleepers were found on the entire line so that it would not reopen until March 2025.


Isumi Railway is a 26.8 km (16.6 miles) long railway in Chiba Prefecture, roughly 60 km (38 miles) southeast of Tokyo. It opened in 1930 as Kihara Line, and renamed Isumi Line when the entire line was transferred from JR East to Isumi Railway in 1988. The line and the company have been funded almost fully by local governments since then.


It was anticipated that there would be very low ridership even before the line was constructed, as the area has always been sparsely populated. The Transport Ministry and local governments discussed about "alternative transport" (i.e. road transport) several times since the 1980s. The latest proposal for the permanent closure was made in 2007, but increasing service frequency, building a new station and selling naming rights have succeeded so that the proposal was subsequently withdrawn. In the 2010s, then-president of the company and a railway enthusiast Akira Torizuka introduced old diesel trains, attracting many other railfans that contributed to not only the train operator itself but also the local economy. Isumi Railway looked somewhat a successful rural railway even amid the decline in demand triggered by the depopulation.


However, the company has spent little on track maintenance. The above photograph clearly shows how deteriorated the rail is (click the photo for a larger image). Despite the low speed of just 30-50 km/h (20-30 mph), trains have always been bumpy. The company concentrated on replacing old bus-like rolling stock 200 series, but it has not invested enough in other part of the railway. When there was an almost identical derailment in 2013, the company has decided to replace wooden sleepers with concrete ones, but it has been advancing at a glacial pace due to financial difficulties. There are many rural railways across the country which train operators have been struggling to maintain, but Isumi Railway seems to have been particularly unsuccessful in securing track safety.


Even so, there is also a sign of hope. The Nikkei article refers to local governments willing to support the company, suggesting that they consider keeping the railway open as essential for local communities. The cost of the work could be substantial even if not all wooden sleepers are replaced with concrete ones at once, but they have been positively discussing about subsidies. It implies taxpayers in the area would agree with not just the expenditure this time but also funding other costs that may be necessary in the near future.