We are sitting onboard our ship in the Shanghai harbour,
waiting for the ship to leave. The sea is murky, the sky clouded with fog,
there is a faint smell of pollution and our departure is as yet delayed by over
an hour. It was a similar story this morning. The ship docked in plenty of time
at 5 am, but at 7 am the central immigration procedures were still underway. In
China these things take time. Despite the burden of beaurocracy, we received a
very warm welcome in Shanghai and spent a wonderful day. Once all the passports
and visas had finally been checked, disembarkation was very swift and
brilliantly organised. Local guides were placed along the passages of the impressive
new terminal building to greet us individually and handout maps. The uniform coaches
were parked ready to leave at parallel
angles, and local folk dancers lined up to welcome our entry in to China.
‘Maglev’ stands for magnetic levitation. It describes the
means of moving a train using electro- magnetism to set up opposing magnetic fields
to propel a train at high speed without rails or wheels.
The Maglev train in Shanghai runs 31km from the city centre
station to the airport.
The journey takes 7 minutes and reaches a maximum speed of 431 km per hour, half as fast again as a Formula 1 car.
Surprisingly, you don’t feel the pace. There are no bumps or
vibrations. Apart from the digital display the only indication of the speed is
when you look out of the window at the rapidly passing scenery. This was an
amazing experience.
Wow Malcolm would love to go on this train......mind you so would I!
ReplyDeleteSomething we didn't manage to do, and I don't suppose we will get there again.
ReplyDelete