Hungaria (train)

Hungaria

ES 499.0 locomotive with the Hungaria
at Budapest Keleti, 2009.
Overview
Service type Interexpress (IEx)
(1986–ca. 1991)
EuroCity (EC)
(since 1993)
Status Operational
Locale  Hungary
 Slovakia
 Czech Republic
 Germany
First service 29 May 1960
Route
Start Budapest Keleti
End Berlin Hbf
Service frequency Daily
Train number(s) EC 170/171 (since 1997)
Technical
Track gauge 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 12 in)
Electrification 25 kV AC, 50 Hz
15 kV AC, 50 Hz
Route map

Hungaria (Hungária) is a EuroCity train which runs between Budapest Keleti and Berlin Hauptbahnhof, currently operated by MÁV. It is numbered as EC 170-171 and runs daily, mainly with MÁV owned rolling stocks.

History

Earlier numbering included EC 174-175, IEx 74/75 and Ex 154/155.

The Hungaria international express train is one of the oldest express trains still in operation. Its first run between Budapest and Berlin via Prague was on 29 May 1960 with a diesel locomotive. It was the first train in the former Czechoslovakia which reached a speed of 130 km/h.

During the 1970s it ran as an express train between the capitals of Hungary and East Germany under train numbers Ex 154/155. Electric locomotives were introduced in this period. The capacity of these locomotives just reached the necessary level.

There were further improvements in the 1980s. MÁV planned to introduce a high level, international rail service with other railway companies of the Eastern Bloc. The Interexpress alliance was founded with the membership of the Czechoslovakian ČSD, Polish PKP, Hungarian and East German DR. The contract was signed in 1986, one year before the establishment of the Western European EuroCity network. In the timetable year of 1986 the Hungaria became an interexpress train with train numbers IEx 74/75. At this time the train terminated in East Berlin, at Berlin-Lichtenberg station, the main railway station of the city. During the next two years it had direct rolling stocks to and from Vienna and in the summer period to Malmö. [1] During this period and usually on Hungarian territories it used the MÁV V63 locomotives.

The Interexpress network was dissolved after the regime change in Eastern Europe, so Hungaria was operated out of this system’s scope.

Nowadays

The current system was implemented together with the EuroCity system in 1993.[2] Its termination in Hungary is Keleti Railway Station in Budapest. The train consists of 9 carriages, of which 2 are first class, 6 second-class and 1 bistro car. All of them are provided by MÁV.[3]

It is usually driven between Budapest and Prague by ZSR’s ŽSR 350 (nicknamed Gorilla) AC locomotive. In this way there is no need to change locomotive at the Hungarian-Slovak or at the Czech-Slovak border. Between Prague and Dresden there is a ČSD 371 high speed AC locomotive at the front of the train. For last part of the route, between Dresden and Berlin there is usually a DB 101 high speed AC locomotive in use.

All carriages are equipped with seats, all of them are able to run in a 200 km/h speed, they are air conditioned and it is possible to reserve a seat for an extra charge. First class carriages Apmz types, second class ones are of the Bmz type. There is a direct carriage between Prague and Budapest operated by ČD.

Route

EC 170 ↓ country station km EC 171 ↑
09:28  Hungary Budapest Keleti 0 18:32
09:51  Hungary Rákospalota-Újpest 9 18:07
10:10  Hungary Vác 35 17:49
10:23  Hungary Nagymaros-Visegrád 52 17:35
10:47  Slovakia Štúrovo 80 17:15
11:12  Slovakia Nové Zámky 124 16:47
12:08  Slovakia Bratislava hlavná stanica 215 15:51
12:45  Slovakia Kúty 279 15:14
12:59  Czech Republic Breclav 297 15:00
13:33  Czech Republic Brno hl.n. 356 14:24
14:38  Czech Republic Česká Třebová 13:18
15:15  Czech Republic Pardubice hl.n. 507 12:41
15:37  Czech Republic Kolín 549 12:19
16:21  Czech Republic Praha 611 11:39
16:39  Czech Republic Praha-Holešovice 614 11:17
17:42  Czech Republic Ústí nad Labem hln. 717 10:13
18:00  Czech Republic Děčín hl.n. 740 09:57
18:17  Germany Bad Schandau 763 09:39
19:04  Germany Dresden Hauptbahnhof 803 09:10
19:55  Germany Elsterwerda 860 07:57
21:13  Germany Berlin Südkreuz 1002 06:43
21:20  Germany Berlin Hauptbahnhof 1006 06:36

See also

References

Notes

Bibliography

  • Bogula, Rico (2007). Internationale Schnellzüge in der DDR [International Express Trains in the GDR]. Freiburg i.B.: EK-Verlag. ISBN 978-3-88255-720-6. (German)

External links