Metrovagonmash 81-717/81-714
81-717/714 | |
---|---|
Train in Moscow | |
In service | 1977-onward |
Manufacturer | Metrovagonmash |
Built at |
Metrovagonmash Vagonmash |
Family name | 81-... |
Replaced | E |
Constructed | 1976-onward |
Entered service | 1977 |
Refurbishment |
81-717.5/714.5 81-717.5M/714.5M 81-717.6K/714.6K 81-717.6/714.6 |
Scrapped | since 2012 (Moscow and Tashkent) |
Capacity | 308/330 passengers |
Operator(s) | Moskovsky Metropoliten |
Depot(s) |
Moscow Metro:
Kharkiv Metro:
Warsaw Metro:
|
Line(s) served |
Moscow Metro:
|
Specifications | |
Car length | 19,206 millimetres (756.1 in) |
Width | 2,670 millimetres (105 in) |
Height | 3,650 millimetres (144 in) |
Doors | 8 (4 by 2 sides) + 1 driver door in frontcar |
Maximum speed | 90 kilometres per hour (56 mph) |
Weight | 34 tonnes (33 long tons; 37 short tons)/33.5 tonnes (33.0 long tons; 36.9 short tons) |
Power output | 440 kilowatts (590 hp) |
Acceleration | 1.2 metres per second squared (3.9 ft/s2)(4.3km/h's) |
Deceleration | 1.1 metres per second squared (3.6 ft/s2)(4.0km/h's) |
Track gauge |
1,520 mm (4 ft 11 27⁄32 in) 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 1⁄2 in) |
81-717/714 is a metro car designed for rapid transit systems of the Soviet Union, as well as its satellite states, in the mid-1970s. A number of Eastern European countries use modified variants of these metro cars, such as the various models used in Poland: 81-717.3, 81-714.3, 81-572, 81-573, 81-572.1, 81-573.1, 81-572.2, and 81-573.2. The Prague Metro in the Czech Republic still has units of variant 81-71M in service. Most variants of the 81-71 family are visually almost identical to the 81-717 and 81-714, except for 81-572.2, which has a cabin that resembles the 81-540.2 (another Russian metro car, an improved version of the 81-717 that was first produced in 2006).
These metro trains are still in service in Moscow, Sofia, Warsaw, Budapest and Tbilisi. 81-71Ms are still in service in Prague.
External links
- Media related to Subway trains type 81-717/714 at Wikimedia Commons
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