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Switzerland: Jungfraujoch Part 2 - The Jungfrau Railway
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Feb 18, 2021 08:29:35   #
rustfarmer
 
We took this trip in 1962 (I was 15) and I remember parts of the train ride were quite scary for me as the tracks run close to the edge of steep drops at some points. I also seem to remember going inside a snow cave (glacier) at the top. Fantastic views indeed.

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Feb 18, 2021 08:38:31   #
blacks2 Loc: SF. Bay area
 
Absolutely gorgeous Mark.

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Feb 18, 2021 08:47:07   #
yssirk123 Loc: New Jersey
 
Very nice set Mark - well done!

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Feb 18, 2021 09:05:40   #
AzPicLady Loc: Behind the camera!
 
Those scenes are gorgeous! Beautiful images.

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Feb 18, 2021 09:25:03   #
J-SPEIGHT Loc: Akron, Ohio
 
srfmhg wrote:
The Jungfrau Railway (German: Jungfraubahn, JB) is a 1,000 mm (3 ft 3 3⁄8 in) metre gauge rack railway which runs 9 kilometres (5.6 mi) from Kleine Scheidegg to the highest railway station in Europe at Jungfraujoch (3,454 m (11,332 ft)), between the Bernese Oberland and the Upper Valais in Switzerland. The railway runs almost entirely within the Jungfrau Tunnel, built into the Eiger and Mönch mountains and containing two stations in the middle of the tunnel, where passengers can disembark to observe the neighbouring mountains through windows built into the mountainside. The initial open-air section culminates at Eigergletscher (2,320 m), which makes it the second highest open-air railway in Switzerland. The line is electrified at 3-phase 1,125 volts 50 Hertz, and is one of four lines in the world using three-phase electric power.

The Jungfraubahn got its name from the highest of the three majestic peaks above it: Jungfrau (English: maiden, virgin; 4,089 metres (13,415 ft))

At Kleine Scheidegg the JB connects with the Wengernalpbahn (WAB), which has two routes down the mountain, running respectively to the villages of Lauterbrunnen and Grindelwald. From both villages, branches of the Berner Oberland-Bahn (BOB) connect to the Swiss Federal Railways at Interlaken.

The line is owned by the Jungfraubahn AG, a subsidiary of the Jungfraubahn Holding AG, a holding company that also owns the Wengernalpbahn, Bergbahn Lauterbrunnen–Mürren, Harderbahn, and Firstbahn. Through that holding company it is part of the Allianz - Jungfrau Top of Europe marketing alliance, which also includes the separately owned Berner Oberland-Bahn and Schynige Platte-Bahn.

Since most of the railway is inside a tunnel, it was designed to run with electricity from conception. The latest rolling stock consists of twin-unit motorcoaches carrying up to 230 people per train which operate at 12.5 km/h on the steepest parts of the ascent. The motors function at two speeds which allows the units to operate at double this speed on the less steep part of the ascent (above Eismeer station).

The motors will operate in a regenerative mode which allows the trains to generate electricity during the descent, which is fed back into the power distribution system. Approximately 50% of the energy required for an ascent is recovered during the descent. It is this generation that regulates the descent speed.

Motive power delivered since 1992 no longer has directly fed three phase motors but is equipped similarly to a normal single phase locomotive. This rolling stock can travel at variable speed which allowed to cut journey time from 52 to 35 min with the timetable starting 11 December 2016. Pre-1992 rolling stock can no longer be used in regular traffic and most of the earlier trains have been scrapped.

Snow clearing equipment is essential on the open section of line between Kleine Scheidegg railway station and Eigergletscher railway station. Originally snow ploughs were used but more recently snow blowing equipment has been brought into service.

The railway also operates some dedicated freight vehicles to supply the visitor facilities at Jungfraujoch, including a tank to transport additional water.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jungfrau_Railway

We boarded the bright red Jungfraubahn train in Kleine Schiedegg for the ride up the mountain which will be the subject of my next few sets. Fortunately the windows of the cars slid open from the top so I was able to capture these images of the magnificent scenery without worrying about glare. These were all taken with a Nikon D7200 and a Nikkor 18-300 lens in AP at f8 with shutter speeds varying between 1/320 to 1/1000 sec. Please try the downloads. I hope you enjoy them.
Mark
The Jungfrau Railway (German: Jungfraubahn, JB) is... (show quote)

Enjoyable set Mark

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Feb 18, 2021 09:26:35   #
cameraf4 Loc: Delaware
 
Beautiful set, Mark. We have planned a trip to the Jungfrau area twice so far that never materialized. Oh, well ... there's always next year (God willing).

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Feb 18, 2021 10:11:10   #
jederick Loc: Northern Utah
 
srfmhg wrote:
The Jungfrau Railway (German: Jungfraubahn, JB) is a 1,000 mm (3 ft 3 3⁄8 in) metre gauge rack railway which runs 9 kilometres (5.6 mi) from Kleine Scheidegg to the highest railway station in Europe at Jungfraujoch (3,454 m (11,332 ft)), between the Bernese Oberland and the Upper Valais in Switzerland. The railway runs almost entirely within the Jungfrau Tunnel, built into the Eiger and Mönch mountains and containing two stations in the middle of the tunnel, where passengers can disembark to observe the neighbouring mountains through windows built into the mountainside. The initial open-air section culminates at Eigergletscher (2,320 m), which makes it the second highest open-air railway in Switzerland. The line is electrified at 3-phase 1,125 volts 50 Hertz, and is one of four lines in the world using three-phase electric power.

The Jungfraubahn got its name from the highest of the three majestic peaks above it: Jungfrau (English: maiden, virgin; 4,089 metres (13,415 ft))

At Kleine Scheidegg the JB connects with the Wengernalpbahn (WAB), which has two routes down the mountain, running respectively to the villages of Lauterbrunnen and Grindelwald. From both villages, branches of the Berner Oberland-Bahn (BOB) connect to the Swiss Federal Railways at Interlaken.

The line is owned by the Jungfraubahn AG, a subsidiary of the Jungfraubahn Holding AG, a holding company that also owns the Wengernalpbahn, Bergbahn Lauterbrunnen–Mürren, Harderbahn, and Firstbahn. Through that holding company it is part of the Allianz - Jungfrau Top of Europe marketing alliance, which also includes the separately owned Berner Oberland-Bahn and Schynige Platte-Bahn.

Since most of the railway is inside a tunnel, it was designed to run with electricity from conception. The latest rolling stock consists of twin-unit motorcoaches carrying up to 230 people per train which operate at 12.5 km/h on the steepest parts of the ascent. The motors function at two speeds which allows the units to operate at double this speed on the less steep part of the ascent (above Eismeer station).

The motors will operate in a regenerative mode which allows the trains to generate electricity during the descent, which is fed back into the power distribution system. Approximately 50% of the energy required for an ascent is recovered during the descent. It is this generation that regulates the descent speed.

Motive power delivered since 1992 no longer has directly fed three phase motors but is equipped similarly to a normal single phase locomotive. This rolling stock can travel at variable speed which allowed to cut journey time from 52 to 35 min with the timetable starting 11 December 2016. Pre-1992 rolling stock can no longer be used in regular traffic and most of the earlier trains have been scrapped.

Snow clearing equipment is essential on the open section of line between Kleine Scheidegg railway station and Eigergletscher railway station. Originally snow ploughs were used but more recently snow blowing equipment has been brought into service.

The railway also operates some dedicated freight vehicles to supply the visitor facilities at Jungfraujoch, including a tank to transport additional water.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jungfrau_Railway

We boarded the bright red Jungfraubahn train in Kleine Schiedegg for the ride up the mountain which will be the subject of my next few sets. Fortunately the windows of the cars slid open from the top so I was able to capture these images of the magnificent scenery without worrying about glare. These were all taken with a Nikon D7200 and a Nikkor 18-300 lens in AP at f8 with shutter speeds varying between 1/320 to 1/1000 sec. Please try the downloads. I hope you enjoy them.
Mark
The Jungfrau Railway (German: Jungfraubahn, JB) is... (show quote)


Gorgeous scenery, Mark...and to think people actually scale those mountains!!

Reply
 
 
Feb 18, 2021 10:16:48   #
FiddleMaker Loc: Merrimac, MA
 
srfmhg wrote:
The Jungfrau Railway (German: Jungfraubahn, JB) is a 1,000 mm (3 ft 3 3⁄8 in) metre gauge rack railway which runs 9 kilometres (5.6 mi) from Kleine Scheidegg to the highest railway station in Europe at Jungfraujoch (3,454 m (11,332 ft)), between the Bernese Oberland and the Upper Valais in Switzerland. The railway runs almost entirely within the Jungfrau Tunnel, built into the Eiger and Mönch mountains and containing two stations in the middle of the tunnel, where passengers can disembark to observe the neighbouring mountains through windows built into the mountainside. The initial open-air section culminates at Eigergletscher (2,320 m), which makes it the second highest open-air railway in Switzerland. The line is electrified at 3-phase 1,125 volts 50 Hertz, and is one of four lines in the world using three-phase electric power.

The Jungfraubahn got its name from the highest of the three majestic peaks above it: Jungfrau (English: maiden, virgin; 4,089 metres (13,415 ft))

At Kleine Scheidegg the JB connects with the Wengernalpbahn (WAB), which has two routes down the mountain, running respectively to the villages of Lauterbrunnen and Grindelwald. From both villages, branches of the Berner Oberland-Bahn (BOB) connect to the Swiss Federal Railways at Interlaken.

The line is owned by the Jungfraubahn AG, a subsidiary of the Jungfraubahn Holding AG, a holding company that also owns the Wengernalpbahn, Bergbahn Lauterbrunnen–Mürren, Harderbahn, and Firstbahn. Through that holding company it is part of the Allianz - Jungfrau Top of Europe marketing alliance, which also includes the separately owned Berner Oberland-Bahn and Schynige Platte-Bahn.

Since most of the railway is inside a tunnel, it was designed to run with electricity from conception. The latest rolling stock consists of twin-unit motorcoaches carrying up to 230 people per train which operate at 12.5 km/h on the steepest parts of the ascent. The motors function at two speeds which allows the units to operate at double this speed on the less steep part of the ascent (above Eismeer station).

The motors will operate in a regenerative mode which allows the trains to generate electricity during the descent, which is fed back into the power distribution system. Approximately 50% of the energy required for an ascent is recovered during the descent. It is this generation that regulates the descent speed.

Motive power delivered since 1992 no longer has directly fed three phase motors but is equipped similarly to a normal single phase locomotive. This rolling stock can travel at variable speed which allowed to cut journey time from 52 to 35 min with the timetable starting 11 December 2016. Pre-1992 rolling stock can no longer be used in regular traffic and most of the earlier trains have been scrapped.

Snow clearing equipment is essential on the open section of line between Kleine Scheidegg railway station and Eigergletscher railway station. Originally snow ploughs were used but more recently snow blowing equipment has been brought into service.

The railway also operates some dedicated freight vehicles to supply the visitor facilities at Jungfraujoch, including a tank to transport additional water.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jungfrau_Railway

We boarded the bright red Jungfraubahn train in Kleine Schiedegg for the ride up the mountain which will be the subject of my next few sets. Fortunately the windows of the cars slid open from the top so I was able to capture these images of the magnificent scenery without worrying about glare. These were all taken with a Nikon D7200 and a Nikkor 18-300 lens in AP at f8 with shutter speeds varying between 1/320 to 1/1000 sec. Please try the downloads. I hope you enjoy them.
Mark
The Jungfrau Railway (German: Jungfraubahn, JB) is... (show quote)

spectacular scenery. I really like the very last one.

Reply
Feb 18, 2021 11:28:11   #
reguli Loc: Uruguay
 
srfmhg wrote:
The Jungfrau Railway (German: Jungfraubahn, JB) is a 1,000 mm (3 ft 3 3⁄8 in) metre gauge rack railway which runs 9 kilometres (5.6 mi) from Kleine Scheidegg to the highest railway station in Europe at Jungfraujoch (3,454 m (11,332 ft)), between the Bernese Oberland and the Upper Valais in Switzerland. The railway runs almost entirely within the Jungfrau Tunnel, built into the Eiger and Mönch mountains and containing two stations in the middle of the tunnel, where passengers can disembark to observe the neighbouring mountains through windows built into the mountainside. The initial open-air section culminates at Eigergletscher (2,320 m), which makes it the second highest open-air railway in Switzerland. The line is electrified at 3-phase 1,125 volts 50 Hertz, and is one of four lines in the world using three-phase electric power.

The Jungfraubahn got its name from the highest of the three majestic peaks above it: Jungfrau (English: maiden, virgin; 4,089 metres (13,415 ft))

At Kleine Scheidegg the JB connects with the Wengernalpbahn (WAB), which has two routes down the mountain, running respectively to the villages of Lauterbrunnen and Grindelwald. From both villages, branches of the Berner Oberland-Bahn (BOB) connect to the Swiss Federal Railways at Interlaken.

The line is owned by the Jungfraubahn AG, a subsidiary of the Jungfraubahn Holding AG, a holding company that also owns the Wengernalpbahn, Bergbahn Lauterbrunnen–Mürren, Harderbahn, and Firstbahn. Through that holding company it is part of the Allianz - Jungfrau Top of Europe marketing alliance, which also includes the separately owned Berner Oberland-Bahn and Schynige Platte-Bahn.

Since most of the railway is inside a tunnel, it was designed to run with electricity from conception. The latest rolling stock consists of twin-unit motorcoaches carrying up to 230 people per train which operate at 12.5 km/h on the steepest parts of the ascent. The motors function at two speeds which allows the units to operate at double this speed on the less steep part of the ascent (above Eismeer station).

The motors will operate in a regenerative mode which allows the trains to generate electricity during the descent, which is fed back into the power distribution system. Approximately 50% of the energy required for an ascent is recovered during the descent. It is this generation that regulates the descent speed.

Motive power delivered since 1992 no longer has directly fed three phase motors but is equipped similarly to a normal single phase locomotive. This rolling stock can travel at variable speed which allowed to cut journey time from 52 to 35 min with the timetable starting 11 December 2016. Pre-1992 rolling stock can no longer be used in regular traffic and most of the earlier trains have been scrapped.

Snow clearing equipment is essential on the open section of line between Kleine Scheidegg railway station and Eigergletscher railway station. Originally snow ploughs were used but more recently snow blowing equipment has been brought into service.

The railway also operates some dedicated freight vehicles to supply the visitor facilities at Jungfraujoch, including a tank to transport additional water.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jungfrau_Railway

We boarded the bright red Jungfraubahn train in Kleine Schiedegg for the ride up the mountain which will be the subject of my next few sets. Fortunately the windows of the cars slid open from the top so I was able to capture these images of the magnificent scenery without worrying about glare. These were all taken with a Nikon D7200 and a Nikkor 18-300 lens in AP at f8 with shutter speeds varying between 1/320 to 1/1000 sec. Please try the downloads. I hope you enjoy them.
Mark
The Jungfrau Railway (German: Jungfraubahn, JB) is... (show quote)


Beautiful scenery and high-quality Swiss engineering

Reply
Feb 18, 2021 11:30:17   #
Susan yamakawa
 
Beautiful pictures 👍👍😊😊

Reply
Feb 18, 2021 12:22:01   #
larrybaill
 
My wife and I and two of our best friends made the journey some approximately 40 years ago. Stepping out onto the train platform at the top of the world is a memory I will never forget! It was an out of body experience that I can only equate to being transported to another planet. Oxygen was thin and we had to work hard for every step we took. Emerging from the train tunnel to the uncompromisingly blinding sun and blowing snow was both exhilarating and awe inspiring. As previously said, the experience was unforgettable!!!

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Feb 18, 2021 14:21:35   #
srfmhg Loc: Marin County, CA
 
jaymatt wrote:
Nice photos and narrative--enjoyed, Mark.


Thanks very much John. Glad you enjoyed them.

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Feb 18, 2021 14:23:46   #
srfmhg Loc: Marin County, CA
 
joehel2 wrote:
Very nicely done, Mark. The downloads are beautiful. I especially love this set because I have an LGB model electric train that is the exact model and colors of the passenger cars in image 1 & 7, except for the Jungfraubahn on the side.


Thanks so much for commenting Joe. I really loved the trains in Switzerland and I’ll post more images of them since they were so much a part of our trip.

Reply
Feb 18, 2021 14:25:20   #
srfmhg Loc: Marin County, CA
 
rustfarmer wrote:
We took this trip in 1962 (I was 15) and I remember parts of the train ride were quite scary for me as the tracks run close to the edge of steep drops at some points. I also seem to remember going inside a snow cave (glacier) at the top. Fantastic views indeed.


Thanks so much for your comments rustfarmer. I will post some images of the ice cave at the top soon. I’m glad the set brought back memories for you.

Reply
Feb 18, 2021 14:26:03   #
srfmhg Loc: Marin County, CA
 
blacks2 wrote:
Absolutely gorgeous Mark.


Thanks so very much Mike. I always appreciate compliments from you.

Reply
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