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The train has been running closed trial runs on the Line 8 track of the Guangzhou Metro. (Picture: Guangzhouzengchengfabu/WeChat)

China tests next-gen subway train with touch-panel windows

The new carbon fiber train can reach nearly 90 miles per hour, but some question if it’s too costly or even necessary

This article originally appeared on ABACUS

China has been working on a next-gen subway train that’s lighter, faster and high-tech. Now it’s getting a trial run in Guangzhou.

The Guangzhou government says the new train can reach speeds of 140 kilometers per hour (87 miles per hour), which is 75% faster than current subway trains. This is because it’s made of carbon fiber composite, making it 13% lighter. It’s also 15% more efficient thanks to the addition of a silicon carbide inverter and permanent magnet synchronous motor.
The train has been doing closed trial runs on Line 8 of the Guangzhou Metro. (Picture: Guangzhouzengchengfabu/WeChat)

But the train isn’t just faster. It includes high-tech upgrades like translucent touch-panels for windows, although it’s not yet known what those touch-enabled windows will be used for.

The window turns into a huge touch display. (Picture: Guangzhouzengchengfabu/WeChat)

The trains are also said to have better sound insulation that will reduce the noise in the cars by more than five decibels.

The government hasn’t said when the trains will be rolled out publicly. (Picture: Guangzhouzengchengfabu/WeChat)
Guangzhou is now the second city to host a trial run of what China calls the “future subway train.” The first trial run was completed in June in China’s eastern city of Qingdao, between Beijing and Shanghai.

Since then, the train went into a secret phase of fine-tuning with little information being made available to the public. Little did we know that the train had been deployed to Guangzhou for another round of trials over the past two months.

While the new train sounds like an impressive upgrade, not everyone online is sold on the idea.

“Is this just a gimmick?,” one popular comment on Weibo said. “If it’s entirely made of carbon fiber, the cost of one carriage is probably already higher than of a whole train today… For a subway train to go 140 km per hour, it’s totally unnecessary.”

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Another netizen is also skeptical about how useful those window touch panels are. “During rush hour in the morning and night, [all the screens] will be blocked by people’s heads,” one person commented about the news.
While working on the new train in China, the state-owned CRRC Corporation is also facing increased scrutiny from overseas in recent months. Since 2014, the world’s largest railway train maker has won US$2.6 billion in contracts to supply subway carriages to transit authorities in Boston, Chicago, Los Angeles and Philadelphia.

But as tensions continue to rise between the two countries, the US Congress has been considering legislation that would prevent CRRC from competing on new contracts in the US on national security and economic grounds. The White House also appears to be on board with a potential ban.

We reached out to CRRC for comment but didn’t receive a response.

It's a window… but also a touch panel. (Picture: Guangzhouzengchengfabu/WeChat)

However things shake out in the US, some people back home in China are eagerly awaiting CRRC’s “future subway train.”

“As a Guangzhou resident, I urge the country to quickly put this to use,” one person wrote on Weibo.

For more insights into China tech, sign up for our tech newsletters, subscribe to our award-winning Inside China Tech podcast, and download the comprehensive 2019 China Internet Report. Also roam China Tech City, an award-winning interactive digital map at our sister site Abacus.

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