Virtual Railfan Tour of Switzerland - Wednesday - Rhein Falls
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A train from Zurich having exited the tunnel under the Schloss Laufen am Rheinfall, crossing the bridge over the falls on its way to Neuhausen and Schaffhausen.
There are two ways to get to the Rhein Falls from Zurich, the line through Bulach and the line through Winterthur. The former gives good views of the falls while the latter crosses the river on a long bridge.
This is the tunnel under the Schloss
There is a station at the southern end of the tunnel with a footpath that will take you on to the bridge. This is a regional train to Winterthur
Siemens Class 514 EMU on a S-Bahn service from Zurich Crossing the Rheinfalls
Train crossing the bridge viewed from the western side
S-Bahn service from Zurich to Shafthausen passing on the western side of the falls.
Observation platform in the middle of Rheinfalls
The falls are impressive and the best way to see them is by foot.
Schloss Laufen from the western side
A short video of a train in top and tail mode crossing the bridge at speed
Tomorrow we will take a short ride from here to see a garden railway at Stein am Rhein
Zurich Hauptbahnhof Paul has prepared some extensive notes and photos of the Zurich Hauptbahnhof. This will be in several parts. The busiest station in Switzerland is Zurich Hauptbahnhof (Zurich HB) which is used primarily by the SBB. It has 26 tracks serving almost 3000 trains daily and it is one of the busiest stations in the world. It was built in the 1870s and is a main shopping destination as well as a transport hub. There are three levels for platforms and the "Shopville" shopping plaza. The river Sihl river passes right through the station with platforms passing above and below the river. This shows the general layout of the station with the surrounding tram tracks shown in purple Tracks 3 to 18 are terminal tracks located at ground level, served by two side platforms and seven island platforms. These are used by long-distance trains from throughout Switzerland, and by international trains. Tracks 21 and 22 are underground terminal tracks, served by a sing...
This video, by Noel Wyler, shows what we have just missed. Last Saturday (14 September) the Oensingen Balsthal Railway organized an event to commemorate 60 years of the Re 4/4 locomotives. They brought together 24 of them and ran them as one train. Paul and I flew home on KLM from Schiphol Airport. We took a train from Den Haag directly to the airport. The trip back was marred by a couple with a young boy who was obviously teething. He cried almost continuously for the full six hours. I found I could tune him out when I dug deep into the KLM sound system and found a treasure trove of classical music. Bach violin concertos, Mozart piano concerto No. 23, Beethoven symphonies, Schuman etc. We survived the stupidities at the entrance of the Montreal airport and caught the KLM bus back to Ottawa where we arrived precisely on time. A good ending to a wonderful, tremendous, trip
A Dutch speciality - pancake with cheese, mushrooms and bacon. This was the only picture I took today - after we had finally arrived at Den Haag. We went early to the station at Basel to check on our train to Dusseldorf only to find out it had been cancelled. A visit to the SBB ticket office revealed that the train hadn't actually been cancelled but was starting today from Karlsruhe. They found a connecting train leaving a little earlier which we took. This became progressively later and later so that it arrived at Karlsruhe just as the connection was about to pull out. A frantic dash across the platform and we were able to claim our seats. The journey to Dusseldorf was peculiar, There were periods when the train went fast (up to almost 200 kmph) and other periods when it dawdled. It progressively lost time except that it arrived at its final destination, Dusseldorf, eleven minutes early. (An injudicious use of recovery time in the schedule?) Dusseldorf gave us an opportuni...
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