"It was a smooth ride," said a senior railway official after nine Talgo coaches were hauled by a 4,500 HP diesel engine on the 90-km line for the first trial run.
The train left Bareilly at 9.05 AM, moved at a speed ranging between 80-115 km per hour, and reached Moradabad at 10.15 AM, the official said.
As of now, the Delhi-Mumbai Rajdhani Express runs at an average speed of 85 km per hour.
The nine-coach Talgo train consists of two Executive Class cars, four Chair Cars, a cafeteria, a power car and a tail-end coach for staff and equipment.
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Hamid Akhtar, Executive Director of Railways' Research Designs and Standards Organisation (RDSO) who was on the Talgo train while on way back from Moradabad, said, "there will be three more such runs" before the success or failure could be assessed.
"It is difficult to say anything about the success or failure of the trial... We will record the timings and other parametres during the journey (in further runs)... The data will be analysed and then only we will be able to say anything. Nevertheless it was a smoth ride," he said.
After the trial run on the Bareilly-Moradabad line, it will be tried on Rajdhani route between Mathura and Palwal for 40 days with speed up to 180 km per hour.
The Talgo train coaches are lightweight and designed in a way that it can run on curves without decelerating the speed, the official said.
Shipped from Barcelona, the Talgo aluminium coaches anchored at Mumbai port on April 21.
Talgo envisages the journey between Delhi and Mumbai can be completed in about 12 hours as compared to 17 hours at present.