The Raichō (雷鳥) was a limited express train operated by the West Japan Railway Company (JR West) between Osaka and Kanazawa in Japan until March 2011, using portions of the Tōkaidō Main Line, Kosei Line, and Hokuriku Main Line.

Raichō
485 series Raichō train with panorama cab car, December 2006
Overview
Service typeLimited express
First service1964
Last service2011
Former operator(s)JR West
Route
Line(s) usedTokaido Line (JR Kyoto Line), Kosei Line, Hokuriku Line
Technical
Rolling stock485 series

The characters literally mean "thunder/lightning" and "bird" in Japanese, but the compound word 雷鳥 (raichō) is the name of Lagopus muta, the rock ptarmigan. The raichō bird inhabits the Tateyama Mountain Range and is the prefectural bird of Toyama, Nagano, and Gifu Prefectures.

Station stops

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Stations in parentheses were not served by all services.

Ōsaka - Shin-Ōsaka - Kyoto - (Katata: Raicho 8 only) - (Omi-Imazu: Raicho 33 only) - Tsuruga - Takefu - Sabae - Fukui - Awaraonsen - Kagaonsen - Komatsu - - Kanazawa

Rolling stock

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Formation

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  • Green: Green car (first class)
  • White: Standard class car
  • O: Observation seats
  • R: Reserved seats
  • NR: Non-reserved seats
  • No smoking accommodation
  • 6 cars
← Osaka Kanazawa →
1 2 3 4 5 6
O, R R R R NR NR
  • Women-only seats are available in Car 3.

History

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The Raichō service was first introduced on 25 December 1964 as a limited express operating between Osaka and Toyama.[1]

From 11 March 1989, Super Raichō services were introduced, operating between Kobe/Osaka and Toyama/Wakura Onsen.[1]

From the start of the 20 April 1995 timetable revision, new 681 series EMUs were introduced on Osaka to Toyama services, named Super Raichō (Thunderbird).[1] These became simply Thunderbird from March 1997.

JR West introduced a "women-only" section in the reserved-seating cars of Raichō and Thunderbird trains from October 2007 following the rape of a female passenger by a man in a train toilet while travelling on a Thunderbird service in August 2006.[2][3]

The last remaining Raichō service was discontinued from the start of the 12 March 2011 timetable revision, with all trains subsequently using the Thunderbird name.[4]

References

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  1. ^ a b c 列車名鑑1995 [Train Name Directory 1995]. Japan: Railway Journal. August 1995.
  2. ^ "Train rapist took advantage of passengers' apathy, fear in night of terror" Japan Today 2 May 2007
  3. ^ "'SOS' stickers going up in every JR East car" The Japan Times, 24 May 2007
  4. ^ "特急「雷鳥」、来年3月で引退=「サンダーバード」に統一―JR西" ["Raichō" Limited express to be retired next March and standardized with "Thunderbird" - JR West] (in Japanese). Yahoo Japan Corporation. 17 December 2010. Archived from the original on 20 December 2010. Retrieved 17 December 2010.