Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Tsurumi rail accident

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Country
  
Japan

Cause
  
Track problems

Total number of deaths
  
162

Trains
  
3

Rail line
  
Tōkaidō Main Line

Date
  
9 November 1963

Injuries
  
120

Tsurumi rail accident httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommons44

Type of incident
  
Derailment and collision

Location
  
Yokohama, Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan

Operator
  
Japanese National Railways

Similar
  
Mikawashima train crash, Sakuragichō train fire, Shigaraki train disaster, Sennichi Department Store Buil, Lagny‑Pomponne rail accident

The Tsurumi rail accident (鶴見事故, Tsurumi jiko, or "Tsurumi accident") occurred on November 9, 1963 between Tsurumi Station and Shin-Koyasu Station on the Tōkaidō Main Line in Yokohama, Japan, about 30 kilometres (20 mi) south of Tokyo, when two passenger trains collided with a derailed freight train, killing 162 people.

Contents

Accident

The 43rd wagon of a long freight train (type WaRa 1) hauled by a JNR Class EF15 electric locomotive on the down-freight railway derailed and the two following wagons overturned, blocking the adjacent "up" passenger railway. Within seconds, a 12-carriage electric multiple unit (EMU) train traveling to Tokyo collided with the freight wagons and the front three carriages (KuHa 76039, MoHa 70079 and KuMoHa 50006 respectively) derailed, falling into the side of the fourth and fifth carriages of another 12-carriage train passing on the down-line to Kurihama. The multiple collision left 161 dead and 120 injured.

Investigation

The initial JNR investigation found that the speed of the freight train (60 km/h) was not excessive, nor were any problems found with the line or rolling stock. For five years from 1967 until 1972, the RTRI carried out tests on a test track located at Karikachi Pass in Hokkaido on an abandoned section of the Nemuro Main Line (Shintoku - Niinai) using the same rails and rolling stock and found that the combination of wheelset design, rail cross section and wear, and track geometry all had a role in the derailment. As a result of the investigation, the old method of static track inspection was replaced with new track inspection cars employing dynamic inspection methods and data collection.

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  • References

    Tsurumi rail accident Wikipedia