Jump to content

Amazing Chiang Mai


svenivan

Recommended Posts

I just read this article in TRWeekly: http://www.ttrweekly...sport-problems/

and it was interesting how hard they are working to make CM more interesting for tourists.

"The province also needs more tourist attractions and the organisation will initiate a project ‘One District One Attraction’ that will focus on 25 districts in the province.

The project started two years ago and we have identified two attractions in two districts — a forest like China’s Zhangjiajie Kad Muang Phi (spiritual market in Lanna ) in Chai Prakan and Pha Wing Chu Cliff in Hot where the Ping River passes through a gorge that has similar features to the Grand Canyon.”

Will it take another 10-12 years to find the other 23 special attractions?

But most interesting was this!

“We believe the construction of the first high speed railway project should start next year and be ready in three years, connecting Bangkok and Chiang Mai. This was confirmed by PM Yingluck who believes it will boost tourism to the province.

“It will reduce travelling time from Bangkok to Chiang Mai from seven hours to three and a half hours and will carry more travellers than other modes of transport.”

The Bangkok-Chiang Mai high speed railway will span over 745 km and trains will reach a cruising speed of 250 kph."

As I say, Amazing Chiang Mai !

biggrin.png smile.png rolleyes.gif

Link to comment
Share on other sites

“It will reduce travelling time from Bangkok to Chiang Mai from seven hours to three and a half hours . . ."

It has never taken me more than about 70 minutes. Plus check-in time.

And only a three-year construction period for 745km of line? I assume all the existing track will have to be torn up and the track bed relaid and new track supplied, in order to provide a strong and super-smooth ride for these 250km/h trains. Working six days a week, three years will be about 900 working days. So that's getting on for 1km of line surveyed, torn up, regraded, relaid and tested every day. Or about 100 metres per working hour. Sounds ambitious to me, to put it mildly. Maybe they plan to work on the line at several places at once.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

No way ...the distance is doable if they can be disciplined about it but ...a big but yet cannot get a straight track that speed will not be doable

When they can do one track each way, then I'll say they are improving.

Should they name the one-way track: "Track of No Return" then? Sounds international to me, like River of No Return whih most people know.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I like a bit is nostalgic ride so the long ride does not bother me

If there are so many tourists as yingluck claims just get the airports right again and the budget airlines should bring the mobs needed for the tourist low season ...u don't need a high speed train for that

....unless the eventual plan as mentioned by premier Wen Jia Bao happens to link them all to kunming then yea u need a high speed train to bring all the unsold rice up !

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I'd ride it.

If they get the Chinese involved and monitor quality control carefully, it can be splendid. The one out of Shanghai was very pleasant to ride and did get up to around 250 or so.

For maglev they'll be laying all new track, though if that's what they're doing.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

“It will reduce travelling time from Bangkok to Chiang Mai from seven hours to three and a half hours and will carry more travellers than other modes of transport.”

obviously Yingluck has never taken the train, I believe she likes to travel by helicopter.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Question: Would YOU trust a Thai train driver to go 250K per hour? On Thai-made curves? Through Thai-made rail crossings?

Just a consideration...

I don't intend this to be derogatory towards Thai's in general but I would be nervous about their ability to construct such a beast.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I'd ride it.

If they get the Chinese involved and monitor quality control carefully, it can be splendid. The one out of Shanghai was very pleasant to ride and did get up to around 250 or so.

For maglev they'll be laying all new track, though if that's what they're doing.

The one from Shanghai to Suzhou does around 320kph, very smooth and with plenty of room. The railway station as you know is more like a very good airport terminal. The Maglev from the airport into town is capable of over 400kph. Very impressive.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I'm used to riding the Shinkansen, Japan's 'Bullet Train.' Wonderful. The seats are comfortable, the air conditioning/ heating are spot on, the toilets are clean and work every time. When the schedule says they will leave at 11:03, they leave at 11:03. If the schedule says they will arrive at 7:46, they arrive at 7:46. Not 7:45 or 7:48. 7:46.

The last time I took the train from Bangkok to Chiang Mai, it was only one day late. I thought that was pretty good. I have no complaints. I'd prefer to take a slow train that gets there, rather than a fast train that might not. We've all lived in Thailand long enough to know that implying that construction 'might not be up to standards' isn't being 'derogatory.' It's being realistic. Flood Control, anyone?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Question: Would YOU trust a Thai train driver to go 250K per hour? On Thai-made curves? Through Thai-made rail crossings?

Just a consideration...

And YOU apparently do trust a Thai pilot to go 800K per hour, between Thai made airports, staffed by Thai traffic controllers.

next.

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Question: Would YOU trust a Thai train driver to go 250K per hour? On Thai-made curves? Through Thai-made rail crossings?

Just a consideration...

And YOU apparently do trust a Thai pilot to go 800K per hour, between Thai made airports, staffed by Thai traffic controllers.

next.

I guess it's a matter of "International Standards Organization" ("ISO") vs "Sort of High, Improbable, or Tits-up" ("SHIT") whistling.gif

Link to comment
Share on other sites

No way ...the distance is doable if they can be disciplined about it but ...a big but yet cannot get a straight track that speed will not be doable

When they can do one track each way, then I'll say they are improving.

Should they name the one-way track: "Track of No Return" then? Sounds international to me, like River of No Return whih most people know.

The current track is a single track, with sidings at strategic locations. I don't really mind -- I'm not in a hurry or else I'd fly. When the train pulls into a siding to let another train pass (happens very frequently), they keep the aircon and beer flowing. I'm a happy traveler for the entire 12-14 hr trip!

Nancy, i hope they don't keep the beer and lao kow flowing among the trainmen and the traffic directors. Professional standards, responsibility, and accountability are not strong traits in this country as many would tend to agree.

I have no qualm about them building the high-speed train. I'm just being skeptical about the time frame they promise of getting the job done. I remember there recently was an accident of a high-speed train running from Shanghai to Beijing in China. Rumor had it that it was a hurried job to complete the job on time - face issue, you know?

A high-speed train would certainly benefit many people traveling between CM and BKK. However, I would rather have them to use the money to improve the present railway system and more importantly build more railway miles to facility the transport of goods and merchandises within the country. Afterall, trains can move a lot of goods and merchandises at lower cost which may benefit more people within the country.

Edited by muchogra
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I'd ride it.

If they get the Chinese involved and monitor quality control carefully, it can be splendid. The one out of Shanghai was very pleasant to ride and did get up to around 250 or so.

For maglev they'll be laying all new track, though if that's what they're doing.

As I understand it, the Chinese high speed trains have been a disaster. Too expensive for average citizens, they've had to reduce the speed on most if not all because they are unsafe at the speeds they are supposed to run at and had plenty of embarrassing setbacks. I think the govt. official in charge is in prison now.

bb

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The accident was a signal box error and in all fairness this could happen to any country as it has

While I work in china , I take the trains almost twice - 4 times a month on the high speed ones ...

I encourage everyone to try the he xie Hao lines which are their latest ...maybe u can see pictures on seat61.com these trains are amazing and more convenient than a plane ride as it gets u right in the city

The 1st class sleepers have flat screen tv and all the mods of a hotel room night and with charging stations for your iPads iPhones etc

Good restaurant service onboard and the ticket is not as expensive as u think it would ...slightly lower than an economy seat on a flight but with all the perks of the room , you get better value than a cramped seat on the plane

Train stations in big cities have modern facilities and ticket boots with English speaking staff

Link to comment
Share on other sites

“It will reduce travelling time from Bangkok to Chiang Mai from seven hours to three and a half hours . . ."

It has never taken me more than about 70 minutes. Plus check-in time.

And only a three-year construction period for 745km of line? I assume all the existing track will have to be torn up and the track bed relaid and new track supplied, in order to provide a strong and super-smooth ride for these 250km/h trains. Working six days a week, three years will be about 900 working days. So that's getting on for 1km of line surveyed, torn up, regraded, relaid and tested every day. Or about 100 metres per working hour. Sounds ambitious to me, to put it mildly. Maybe they plan to work on the line at several places at once.

In Thailand time stands still if Big T mandates it
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Question: Would YOU trust a Thai train driver to go 250K per hour? On Thai-made curves? Through Thai-made rail crossings?

Just a consideration...

Have you rode the skytrain in Bangkok, built with Thai, Burmese, and Cambodian labour. very good accident record.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Question: Would YOU trust a Thai train driver to go 250K per hour? On Thai-made curves? Through Thai-made rail crossings?

Just a consideration...

Have you rode the skytrain in Bangkok, built with Thai, Burmese, and Cambodian labour. very good accident record.

Not quite the same as something going 250 K per hour.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

“It will reduce travelling time from Bangkok to Chiang Mai from seven hours to three and a half hours . . ."

It has never taken me more than about 70 minutes. Plus check-in time.

And only a three-year construction period for 745km of line? I assume all the existing track will have to be torn up and the track bed relaid and new track supplied, in order to provide a strong and super-smooth ride for these 250km/h trains. Working six days a week, three years will be about 900 working days. So that's getting on for 1km of line surveyed, torn up, regraded, relaid and tested every day. Or about 100 metres per working hour. Sounds ambitious to me, to put it mildly. Maybe they plan to work on the line at several places at once.

Yes if its a mono rail........dont forget one track has 2 lines of steel, if they are maling a dual track thats 4 lines of 750km.

so even moooore ambitious. so thats 400m of track laid in one hour..........lets go for a 10yr building periodcheesy.gif

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The current trains are re-assuringly slow.

Would it be fair to say this is typical:

The CM-BKK train is creeping along slowly. Finally it comes to a halt. A passenger sees the conductor walking by outside

"whats going on?" she yells.

"cow on the track" the conductor replies

Ten minutes later the train resumes its slow pace but within 5 minutes it stops again.

The woman sees the conductor walk by again so leans out the window and yells

"whats up; did we catch up with the cow again?"

its not that slow...surely?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.







×
×
  • Create New...