Uno Line - Rolling Stock

Rolling Stock

Class Image Type Top speed
(km/h)
Routes operated
JR Shikoku 8000 series Electric multiple unit 130 Limited express Shiokaze Okayama - Matsuyama, Uwajima
JR Shikoku/Tosa Kuroshio Railway 2000 series Diesel multiple unit 130 Limited express Nanpū
Limited express Uzushio
Okayama - Kōchi, Sukumo
Okayama - Tokushima
JR West/JR Central 285 series Electric multiple unit 130 Limited express Sunrise Seto Tokyo - Takamatsu
JR West 223-5000 series, JR Shikoku 5000 series Electric multiple unit 130 Rapid Marine Liner Okayama - Takamatsu
JR West 213 series Electric multiple unit 110 Regional Okayama - Uno, Kojima
JR West 115 series Electric multiple unit 110 Regional Okayama - Uno, Kan'onji, Kotohira
JR Shikoku 113 series Electric multiple unit 110 Regional Okayama - Kan'onji, Kotohira
JR West lines
Shinkansen
  • Sanyō (Hakata-Minami)
Main
  • Hokuriku
  • Kansai
  • Kisei
  • San'in
  • San'yō
  • Takayama
  • Tōkaidō
Local
  • Akō
  • Bantan
  • Etsumi-Hoku
  • Fukuchiyama
  • Fukuen
  • Gantoku
  • Geibi
  • Hakubi
  • Hanwa
  • Himi
  • Honshi-Bisan
  • Inbi
  • Jōhana
  • JR Tōzai
  • Kabe
  • Kakogawa
  • Kansai Airport
  • Katamachi
  • Kibi
  • Kishin
  • Kisuki
  • Kosei
  • Kure
  • Kusatsu
  • Maizuru
  • Mine
  • Nanao
  • Nara
  • Obama
  • Ōito
  • Onoda
  • Osaka Higashi
  • Osaka Loop
  • Sakai
  • Sakurai
  • Sakurajima
  • Sankō
  • Tsuyama
  • Ube
  • Uno
  • Wakayama
  • Yamaguchi
Past
  • Gannichi
  • Kajiya
  • Miyazu
  • Noto
  • Shigaraki
  • Taisha
  • Toyamakō
  • Wakasa

Read more about this topic:  Uno Line

Famous quotes containing the words rolling and/or stock:

    The child is innocence and forgetting, a new beginning, a game, a wheel rolling on its own, a prime movement, a sacred Yes.
    Friedrich Nietzsche (1844–1900)

    I met a Californian who would
    Talk California—a state so blessed
    He said, in climate, none had ever died there
    A natural death, and Vigilance Committees
    Had had to organize to stock the graveyards
    And vindicate the state’s humanity.
    Robert Frost (1874–1963)