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The WORLD’S LAST STEAM TRAINS: CHINA (Paperback)
Loot Price: R506
Discovery Miles 5 060
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The WORLD’S LAST STEAM TRAINS: CHINA (Paperback)
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List price R562
Loot Price R506
Discovery Miles 5 060
You Save R56 (10%)
Expected to ship within 9 - 17 working days
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China was the last country in the world to manufacture and operate
steam locomotives. By the early 1980s, there were an estimated
10,000 operational steam locomotives in the country, but by the
1990s, diesel and electric locomotives started to replace them on
the main lines and the number in service reduced substantially as
the millennium approached. The last steam locomotives were finally
withdrawn from China Rail in 2003. After that, some continued to
operate heavy freight trains on local railways for a short while,
but most were deployed for use on the country's industrial
railways, mainly at coal mines and steel works. This trend
continued into the first decade of the 21st century, but
subsequently, the number of steam engines in service declined
substantially and were confined to just a handful of industrial
locations. Steam rail operations in China are now facing
extinction. The modernisation of the railways with the switch from
steam to diesel, the closure of unsafe and loss-making collieries
and China's drive to reduce pollution and combat climate change
from burning coal, have all conspired towards the demise of the
industrial lines operating steam in China. This book looks at the
last of the standard-gauge steam operations in China, including
Sandaoling, the last steam-worked opencast coal mine in the world;
Fuxin, a coal-mining city in Liaoning Province, which until
recently, operated the largest surviving fleet of SY locomotives;
Baiyin, in Gansu Province, which operated some of the last
steam-hauled passenger trains in the world; and Wu Jiu, a remote
coal-mining outpost in Inner Mongolia. Beautifully illustrated with
over 120 colour photographs and a description of the operations,
this is a striking portrait of the last of the world's operating
steam trains.
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