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An Alfa Pendular in Santa Apolónia Station, Lisbon.. Since the late 1990s Comboios de Portugal (CP) has run the Alfa Pendular service, connecting Portugal's mainland from the north border to the Algarve at a speed of up to 220 kilometres per hour (140 mph) (in specific sections), which reduced the travel time between Porto and Lisbon by approximately 30 minutes.
In 2007, the TGV was the world's fastest conventional scheduled train: one journey's average start-to-stop speed from Champagne-Ardenne Station to Lorraine Station is 279.3 km/h (173.5 mph). [ 4 ] [ 5 ] This record was surpassed on 26 December 2009 by the new Wuhan–Guangzhou high-speed railway [ 19 ] in China where the fastest scheduled train ...
The rail network will be able to connect Lisbon to Porto with speeds as high as 300km/h, and in a total travel time of 75 minutes without stops, and 105 minutes with stops. The new high-speed line will have stops in Leiria, Coimbra, Aveiro, Vila Nova de Gaia, apart from the already mentioned in Lisbon-Santa Apolónia and Porto-Campanhã.
TGV 5537 / 5516 SNCF Voyageurs: 1,199 km 17 Daily 10 hrs 06 mins [59] Nantes: Marseille: TGV 5306 SNCF Voyageurs: 1,163 km 8 Weekly (On Fridays) 6 hrs 40 mins [60] Rennes: Marseille: TGV 5332 / 5386 / 5382 SNCF Voyageurs: 1,116 km 6-7 Daily + Twice on Saturdays 5 hrs 50 mins [61] Rennes: Montpellier: TGV 5336 SNCF Voyageurs: 1,100 km 7 Weekly ...
Lyria TGV Sud-Est in original grey and blue TGV livery A TGV Lyria POS train in Lausanne alongside a RABe 503 EC35. Initially, the corporation was a groupement d'intérêt économique (GIE: "group of (shared) economic interest") between SNCF and SBB CFF FFS whose goal was the creation of a TGV service between Gare de Lyon (Paris) and Lausanne/Bern.
Porto and Vigo are currently served by the Celta service, taking 2 hours and 23 minutes to complete its journey. High-speed rail in Portugal was planned in the 1990s and formally announced in 2005, [2] which included the Lisbon–Madrid high-speed rail line, a Lisbon to Porto line and the line from Porto to Vigo, Spain. The plan was cancelled ...
The RER B commuter line is a heavy-rail service to the Parisian region. CDGVAL connects Terminal 1 passengers from the stop at RER B stop at Terminal 3. Terminal 2 has an RER-B platform directly underneath it; this station also handles the high-speed TGV, and Eurostar.
After the introduction of the TGV on some routes, air traffic on these routes decreased and in some cases disappeared. [31] The TGV set a publicised speed records in 1981 at 380 km/h (240 mph), in 1990 at 515 km/h (320 mph), and then in 2007 at 574.8 km/h (357.2 mph), although these were test speeds, rather than operation train speeds.