One thing that I noticed on Chinese HSR trains is how incredibly smooth the ride is. It's easy to lose the sense of speed if you're not looking through the window because it may be tricky to tell otherwise if the train is going 50km/h or 300km/h, it's that good. At present easily not only the fastest but the smoothest HSR trains in the world.
yeah, well said until you have something like Wenzhou high speed train collision. where China's swiftly blocked physical access and media coverage of it... all part and parcel of the unique and colorful high-speed rail experience in china, expacially to the China aficionados in the west.
@@verRioti64902What's your point ? Lighting caused a series of events leading to a crash causing 40 fatalities in a country with 1.4 billion is statistically irrelevant - not that any lives lost should be treated lightly. This was all over Western media in 2011 - how is it a cover-up ?😮 Many in management & government were sacked over the incident. Comparatively, how many people are held accountable for fatal crashes in USA or India ?😅 *_What's your benchmark - perfection ?_* How often does a train accident occurs in China - everyday ?? Can you name any countries that doesn't have any train accidents ? What's the record in the world's best democracy & technologically advanced USA with only a quarter population of China ? It's OK to be & think positively in life you know ... 😊
@@verRioti64902 This was the only significant accident in China's HSR system (although that line only allowed for 200km/h speed and had different signaling from 300+km/h lines). The cover up was quickly reversed and decisions taken. After that China has impeccable HSR safety track record which looks even more impressive considering passenger kms. So sorry, but your argument just doesn't stand up scrutiny and is clearly intended to mislead.
Just came back from China. Beijing-Luohe-Zaozhuang-Ningbo-Shanghai with some local trips around these cities:) 8 days of high-speed trains, hotels, factories, people. What is left in my heart? Amazing people, warm weather, great views, super high-speed trains' system, variety of food, very nice hotels and service. I’ll be back to China!
China is a huge country! The terrain is complex! High-speed rail is more than just vehicle technology! And railway construction technology! Power facility system technology! China's high-speed trains are basically on viaducts! Unique to the world! The most important thing is that China's terrain is very complex! Hard technical PR is needed! Everyone knows that China’s high-speed rail mileage far exceeds that of all countries in the world! It can be said that every city in China has high-speed rail! Different types of vehicles and speeds! The highest altitude area in the world in Tibet, China! There is also a quasi-high-speed rail!
back in 2001 in China,as a freshman in university, I took a train back home from university in holidays. It took 36hours😢 I was stuck in a tiny hard seat. But in fact I was lucky coz i had a seat. a lot of people without a seat stand in the corridors for days.it is almost impossible for me to cross over the crowd to get to toilet. It was a long nightmare for me for years. And I am so glad to see the brilliant HSR right now. Good job China
When I was young, I went from Beijing to Guangdong (very close to HongKong) on a 24 hour train.. It was the fastest I think... can't believe it has been reduced to 8.5 hours on a even longer travelling distance. wow things have changed!
@@presspound7358 ... underlied by the strong spirit of Chinese people of being a top country in the world, washing away the shame of being oppressed by the West, and being free from hegemony of western countries.
@@hengzhou4566 Your comment is totally unnecessary…. it merely stains the accomplishment of the workforce assigned to these projects. Those workers didn’t have the time nor the energy to stop and ponder the weight of Western interaction with China and how the latter suffered humiliation. You’re wasting the proud accomplishment in order to vent on the lingering emotions of a culture specific inferiority complex. Grow up. It should be obvious to you and your chairman that CHINA ISN’T IN THIS MINDSET ANYMORE. Show us what CONFIDENCE SOUNDS LIKE with GRACE and SURE FOOTEDNESS. 🇨🇦
well, except a 747 is a lot faster, and in the USA you have individual liberty. Plus the US Government is accountable to We the People and the Chinese Communist Party is not accountable to the people of China.
It’s so nice to hear that you enjoyed the CR carts! I just want to mention something about the food choice. The KFC you saw there could be a ordered via QR code located on the arm rest and delivered to you at the intermediate stops🎉
This is the CR400 series HSR which is designed to run at 400 Km/h on an ideal rail track. The latest series being tested in China is the CR450. On June 28, 2023, two CR450 were tested over the Meizhou Bay cross-sea bridge (part of the Fuzhou-Xiamen high-speed railway) before the line was opened to the public. The CR450 attained a speed of 453 km/h (281 mph).
@@PenskePC17 Not quite correct...even if you insist on the idea that we borrowed technology from foreign companies the CR450 contains more Siemens- and Kawasaki-originated technology. Bombardier's design plays quite little role in our high-speed railway trains (>300km/h)
@@morganangel340 Bombardier is a Canadian company that sells internationally. Try not being the dmbest person in the room next time you attempt a "gotcha" question.
@@armamentarmedarm1699 there are only some flagship trains can up to 350kph,such as g1 g2 g5 g7 g14 etc. it's not so rare .you can notice this next time.
China’s Legal System Enables Intellectual Property Theft The Chinese Communist Party (CCP) is ruthless in getting what it wants, and that includes your IP. Chinese companies will propose a joint venture for the sole purpose of stealing the foreign company's IP.
Welcome to China man! Btw for the food options, you can order thru scan the QR code printed on the armrest. A ton of options including the restaurants in the stations along the route. The train attendants will deliver those to your seat!
@@blarfroer8066 Only few trains in Europe hit this speed. the fastest train in Europe is trainitalia. when it comes to trains and bridges no country in Europe is close to what china has achieved and the number of people they move with high speed train. When it comes to high speed trains China and Japan have it covered
@@blarfroer8066 I'm not talking about cruising speed. I'm talking about average speed, which for the train in this video is 296km/h. This includes all the slowing down for stations, signals, points, etc. For example, the German ICE from Frankfurt Airport to Cologne has a cruising speed of 300km/h, but the average speed is only 215km/h.
@@NonstopEurotrip Exactly. You can achieve so much faster travelling times by focussing on this, not simply the top speed of the train. Back in 2017 I took the high-speed train from Shanghai to Futian (Hong Kong border) when they were still being limited to 300km/h max, but still due to a dedicated track (no signals, no waiting for other trains) and only 7 intermediate stops we did 2000 km in just under 9 hrs. Comparing again to Europe, this is like Kopenhagen to Naples in 9h, which currently takes over 24h! And no ultra-futuristic 600km/h Maglev required.
It's also the most modern looking train I have seen. The colour, speed and the quality is best on the planet. Big Thank you for showing all these amazing things every week 😍
On China's railway lines, you can see the German Siemens series (CRH3), the French Alstom series (CRH5), the Japanese Kawasaki series (CRH2/B/E, etc.), and the Canadian Bombardier (CRH1 /A/B/E, etc.), there are even CRH6 and CJ6 models that are the same as the Italian ETR600, and the Swedish Regina C2008 model.😂The above models constitute the first generation of China's Harmony high-speed rail, which has now been basically replaced by China's independently developed Fuxing train, the CRH400. In the 1990s and early 21st century, China also developed its own EMU, but the development failed in the end because China's manufacturing level was too low at the time, and the core chip of the high-speed rail, the IGBC chip, was monopolized by Germany's Siemens. By 2014, China's first and the world's second 8-inch IGBT chip production line was completed and put into production at the CRRC Zhuzhou Research Institute. This gave China the technology to independently develop high-speed rail.
I love, love, love travelling by high speed train in China. Convenient, clean, comfortable, efficient and friendly. When I return home and use transportation services it’s like going back in time 50 years.
I am very much thankful to you as I am traveling several cities and countries without spending a single penny, through your great and informative vlogs. Keep up the good work 👍
Congrats on finally making it to China. China's HSR network is simply the best, no other country even come close. Great video, factual and honest review. Love it. Look forward to more of your videos in China.
Japan's is simply the gold standard. Their amenities and comfort are more advanced, high tech, and hygienic and the quality of their service and dining options are top of the class.
@@paranoidhumanoidAre you trying to see whether Japanese coins and pens can stand upright without falling over? This is very different from China, and your information is very backward.
@@Chinese-windMentioning safety would’ve made a better argument, ever since the Shinkansen started running in 1964, there have been no fatalities ever. But China has had multiple horrible accidents, and they even tried to cover them up, as is the communist way of doing things lol.
Finally you're in China! Totally agree with you that CRH is the best high speed network in the world right now. The length of the network is mind blowing!
Great vlog! One error in the video - the water you crossed on the way is not Yangtze River but Taihu Lake. You only get to cross the Yangtze River AFTER departing Nanjing heading north. Welcome to China 🎉
@@NonstopEurotrip Next time try the entire route in a sunny day. I took 4 times (G1 G20from hangzhou G15 G24)and never gets enough. BTW the hsr will also cross the yellow river near Jinan.
Welcome to China mate! The Shanghai-Beijing route is one of the most important routes in China. Hope you enjoy the ride on CR400BF-Z, which represents the latest technique of Chinese railway! Through the high-speed network it's easy to travel across provinces, hope you could enjoy more in China!!
Excellent video. Yes, I travelled in business class (very similar to this with lie-flat seats, but not with fully enclosed private type compartment) in early 2020 from Zhumadian (Henan Province) to Beijing, about 4 1/2 hours I recall, about 1/2 way to Guangdong or Hong Kong on the main line from Beijing. Exceptionally smooth, just as you found. We did an evening trip so the meal served was dinner, with a pot of soup & numerous snacks in addition to the airline style tray meal. What particularly impressed me was that neither the soup nor tea liquid surface even shimmered/vibrated, and there was no risk of liquids slopping around within their containers as the acceleration & deceleration when leaving & arriving at intermediate stations was exceptionally smooth. Altogether very impressive. We booked our tickets locally there, for my partner it was very straightforward (being Chinese with an identity card) for me it was a bit more complicated but my partner handled it all for us, although of course I still had to validate the trip with my passport & indeed Chinese citizens like my partner only gain access to the dedicated bullet-train station & platforms using their ID cards too.
Back in 2020, you might need to get your passport checked manually by staff, but nowadays, as shown in the video, you only need to scan your passport at the entrance.
How was the lack of individual liberty, Bill? Were you comforted by the absence of people speaking critically toward the Chinese Communist Party? There's a reason for that absence.
Its because the US is making enemies, not friends. They have their bunch of friends in Europe and thats about it... Japan and Korea perhaps, but to sanction the import of Chinese cars (same as my beloved Europe), only speaks volumes about how good China is at making stuff. If they commit to making cars... No one will be better... And they did... And they are already, in 10 years, China will be accepted as the greatest power in the world, now that they are in BRICS, they will all flourish, Russia will supply them with aircraft, like mc-21, energy and Saudis will bring the fun bits to the party, its the future...
Availability of HSR in China, it’s network, frequency, capacity, ease of booking will be a big attraction not just for locals but to foreign “free & easy” visitors in this digital age. It is more than 10 times the HSR network in Europe in Europe or Japan. Its fare is cheaper. Just hope it will offer something like JR Pass or Eurail Global Pass.
Bit of an update from a Chinese railfan, as of the 2024 Q1 Railway Timetabling, there have been railpasses offered on sale for the majority of the network, including both HS (200-350kph, G, D and C train) and Slow (120-160kph, D and C train) services. The program has been spread nationwide, and instances from every province and region with railroads can be found below: Anhui: Hefei-Huangmei Railpass (20 rides in 90 days, 2700 RMB) [Terminus in Hubei] 250kph Beijing: Beijing-Shanghai Railpass (20 rides in 90 days, 11,240 RMB) [Includes stations in Tianjin, Hebei, Shandong, Jiangsu, Anhui, Shanghai] 350kph Chongqing: Chongqing-Chengdu Railpass (20 rides in 90 days, 2720 RMB) [Includes stations in Sichuan] 350kph Fujian: Fuzhou-Xiamen Railpass (20 rides in 90 days, 2320 RMB) 350kph Gansu: Lanzhou-Tianshui Railpass (20 rides in 90 days, 1720 RMB) 250kph Guangdong: Guangzhou Intercity Railpass (42 rides in 30 days, 1156 RMB) 160kph Guangxi: Nanning-Beihai Railpass (20 rides in 90 days, 1180 RMB) 250kph Hainan: Haikou-Sanya Railpass (20 rides in 90 days, 1900 RMB) 250kph Hebei: Shijiazhuang-Beijing Railpass (20 rides in 90 days, 2440 RMB) [Includes stations in Beijing] 350kph Heilongjiang: Jiamusi-Hegang Railpass (20 rides in 90 days, 420 RMB) 120kph Henan: Zhengzhou-Puyang Railpass (20 rides in 90 days, 1800 RMB) 350kph Hong Kong: Hong Kong-Guangzhou Railpass (20 rides in 90 days, 4040 RMB) [Includes stations in Guangdong] 350kph Hubei: Wuhan-Chongqing Railpass (20 rides in 90 days, 5480 RMB) [Includes stations in Chongqing] 350kph Hunan: Changsha Intercity Railpass (20 rides in 90 days, 514 RMB) 160kph Inner Mongolia: Hohhot-Baotou Railpass (20 rides in 90 days, 960 RMB) 200kph Jiangsu: Nanjing-Xuzhou Railpass (20 rides in 90 days, 3040 RMB) [Includes stations in Anhui] 350kph Jiangxi: Nanchang-Fuzhou Railpass (20 rides in 90 days, 3160 RMB) 200kph Jilin: Changchun-Hunchun Railpass (20 rides in 90 days, 2760 RMB) 250kph Liaoning: Shenyang-Dandong Railpass (20 rides in 90 days, 1340 RMB) 200kph Ningxia: Yinchuan-Zhongwei Railpass (20 rides in 90 days, 1240 RMB) 250kph Qinghai: Xining-Menyuan Railpass (20 rides in 90 days, 580 RMB) 250kph Shandong: Jinan-Qingdao Railpass (20 rides in 90 days, 2220 RMB) 350kph Shanghai: Shanghai-Nantong Railpass (20 rides in 90 days, 1340 RMB) [Includes stations in Jiangsu] 200kph Shanxi: Taiyuan-Yuanping Railpass (20 rides in 90 days, 640 RMB) 250kph Sichuan: Chengdu Intercity Railpass (20 rides in 90 days, 285 RMB) 200kph Shaanxi: Xi'an-Baoji Railpass (20 rides in 90 days, 979 RMB) 250kph Tianjin: Beijing-BInhai Railpass (10 rides in 90 days, 665 RMB) [Includes stations in Hebei, Beijing] 350kph Tibet: Lhasa-Nyingchi Railpass (20 rides in 90 days, 2460 RMB) 160kph Xinjiang: Urumqi-Hami Railpass (20 rides in 90 days, 3180 RMB) 250kph Yunnan: Kunming-Sipsong Panna Railpass (20 rides in 90 days, 3960 RMB) 160kph Zhejiang: Hangzhou-Nanjing Railpass (20 rides in 90 days, 2400 RMB) [Includes stations in Jiangsu] 300kph Railpasses can be purchased in segments of the track too, so one could for example purchase the Tianjin-Nanjing leg of the Beijing-Shanghai railpass at a lesser cost.
Haha I said 'high speed multiple units', so that doesn't include the rubbish bins! I actually quite like their green livery, it's a nice change from the standard green coaches.
There is actually another and far greater food option. You can order anything you want, McDonalds, Starbucks, KFC, anything your heart desires through the main APP at least 25 minutes before arriving at a key station and during the brief stationary time it will be delivered directly to your seat. I have done this on many occassions on HSR in China.
Totally awesome! ! Reminds me of business class international flights on Cathy Pacific (and probably other lines also!). So far ahead of other countries, especially the U S. (that's embarrassing!). Glad you got to travel and film it. Thanks.
Do you mean Cathay Pacific? If Yes then they beat AA/AS Oneworld partners🇺🇲. Also the same high-speed train in the video goes up to Hong Kong from Beijing via Changsha Hunan Province and Guangzhou
A well detailed and informative review, thank you. I can't wait for your other explorations, pls be sure to check out other routes in the central and western regions of China, I'm sure you will be IMPRESSED by the diverse landscapes of this Massive country.
Shinkansen are very different on different routes (as are the HSR too of course, but to a lesser degree..) I would say the better models of the Shinkansen (the Tokaido, Akita/Hokkaido, Kyushu) are slightly better than this one in top-tier, & considerably, if you consider in the standard ticket carriages... these are however a deal cheaper than a Shinkansen (even 1st class would be cheaper, Business is approximately equal to standard for the Japanese Shinkansen)
Ride quality depends on the track. Chinese tracks are newer, thus more stable. Japanese tracks are older, so they need better suspension to run Shinkansen at 300 km/hr.
@@panzer3279 depends... some Japanese track is very smooth, than, there are the mountain parts which are less then straight, so the smoothness is also less... for most wide track Shinkansen, the vibration as such is minimal except on approach to a city (and that has to do with switches and controls on overpass structures)
@@stanislavkostarnov2157 Thanks for the feedback. I only commented based on my observation on the video as I've never taken the HSR yet. In comparison, I have ridden the Shinkansen countless times since the 0 series. It's hard to make an objective comparison without trying both of them in different lines. I've read so much comments on Quora that the HSR's are way smoother than Shinkansens, but most of those had a nationalistic tone to it so I couldn't take their word. It would be nicer if it were an outsider expressing his/her impressions on both types
many things are possible when the government is a communist dictatorship not accountable to We the People. Especially when your critics oddly disappear
Beautiful journey. The train looks very sleek, and I noticed it was extremely smooth. I think China must have one of the best, if not the best rail system in the world. Doubly so if scale is factored in.
@@neutrino78x lol enjoy your CNN propaganda. Buh muh sEeSeePeE diCtaToRshIp... All 3 of those countries have a fraction of Chinas rail and worse too. Italy lmao
This is not the end. the new brand CR450 which has 450kph maximum speed is on the way. that's means, you can spend less time from Beijing to Shanghai by take bullets trains than fly. THAT'S INCREDIBLE!!!
I feel safer on an aeroplane than I do on high-speed rail. Planes have multiple redundancy built in - if something goes wrong there's lots of back-up. On a high-speed train, a cracked wheel or a cracked rail or a badly maintained coupling means a high-speed crash with multiple loss of life . . .
@@jamesneilsongrahamloveinth1301 There have been more fatal aeroplane accidents than high-speed rail accidents. Japan has to date not one fatal rail accident since the first bullet train started service...
Been to China in 2018, 2019 and 2023, never took a plane for domestic trips, only trains, they were great! Beijing-Nanjing, leaving the current capital at the end of the day, having dinner in the train, and going to sleep in the former capital at night.
It seems China invested in trains where most other countries use domestic short haul flights instead. Trains are a bit slower, but a decent alternative.
@@NonstopEurotrip It should be with around $1,000,000,000,000 of railway-related debt and huge losses each year. Such expansion of high-speed rail does not come cheap!
@@cocoaiscool2709 Agreed, but there's a difference between loss-making/government-subsidised and totally non-sustainable. Focusing on the productivity and efficiency of the high speed network is more important than its expansion and likewise fast freight is also, in theory, more important than ultra-fast passenger services.
It is! Only 2-3 years after the construction the pillars of the bridges and viaducts is crumbling. Pretty much everything in China is made not to last because of the overall corruption.
U have to try the new compartment suites train in Indonesia. For now they only available in Agro Semeru and Bima. Both of those train goes from Gambir Station in Jakarta to Surabaya Gubeng Sation using southern route. U don't have to go all the way to Surabaya u could just stop at Yogyakarta Tugu Station and take the historic tour in the city and visit some ancient temples and palaces arround the area. U won't regret it I promise u. ❤
Imagination ! నాకు ఐదేళ్ల వయసులో విజయవాడ సమీపంలోని తాడేపల్లిలో రైల్వే ట్రాక్ మరమ్మతులకు ఉపయోగించే చిన్న ఇంజన్ అప్పట్లో చాలా ఆకర్షణీయంగా, ఆసక్తికరముగాా ఉండేది ✌️I Like China Beautiful trains ! -విజయ్, ఒంగోలు
you missed out the food delivery service. they have this app that enables on board passengers to order food from the outside, to be delivered to you at your seat. amazing china. as i understand, food delivery will be done via next route stops.
What a sheer scale of quality infrastructure. That is what all governments should spend their money on. I really liked the way you narrated the trip with detailed information as smooth as the train itself. Sub'ed. FYI, China CRRC just officially announced indigenous mglev trains CF600, which can operate at 600+km/h. Hopefully, you can test it in the near future.
Each country has its own priorities: some prefer highways, se prefer railways, and others prefer airways. For some non of the above, but prefer to spend their money on huge army, Airforce, navy and war games.
@@MattsFikezolo-lo7wq "For some non of the above, but prefer to spend their money on huge army, Airforce, navy and war games." Which countries are this?
@@MaxBerry-j6d The USA has plenty of money. Congress wastes it on things other than infrastructure. Hence, our national debt and the debt payments .. which is now the second biggest line item in the "budget". Yeah. Truth.
Great video. Only train I've done in China is the Maglev. This train looks amazing - and £68 for business seems a steal. For that sort of seat I'd happily spent 4-5 hours there. So smooth it's hard to get a sense of the speed. Really remarkable how China is growing.
In Asia there are only 2 fast trains, namely in China and in Indonesia. As an Indonesian, I feel very proud to have a fast train, namely the WHOOSH Red Comodo fast train.
not fast bro, is fastest. If just fast, Marocco have it. But if fastest, only two country, Cina and Indonesia with speed 350-400 km/h, the others country are below that.
It's wonderful to watch a video on someone else that has also travelled on a Chinese HSR, I have travelled on one myself, on the older variants of the train, but they are just incredible, no one does rail travel better than China.
Very nice - and competitive with flying I would think. Does this mean the country's emmissions will reduce and ease the climate crisis a bit, to all our benefit? I hope so. Shame we're unlikely to see the like in Europe anytime soon (and in Britain probably never!). Thanks for sharing.
There is currently an petition for the EU called HSR or High Speed Rail that aims to connect all capitals of the EU with high speed rail. Sign it, if you are from the EU!!
If more people travel longer distances, emissions will be INCREASED. You need people to stay at home for a reduction. (And, no, most of them wouldn't have been flying instead.) A large number of Chinese high-speed trains also run almost empty because there was very little demand for those services in the first place.
@@dw620 I may be wrong, but I believe there have been a lot of reports, commissioned by governments, environmental groups, rail operators and others, that have shown that modern electric railways, whether high or low speed, properly priced and efficiently run to attract higher passenger numbers and thus reducing the volume of road and air traffic, will reduce emmissions. There are of course caveats (aren't there always?) but overall it seems a more environmentally efficient and comfortable way to travel! Even in these post-Covid times of remote working, there will always be a need for large numbers of people to commute distances for work. I've spent years commuting by train, bus and car, and twenty years globe trotting for work by train and plane, and now retired (so travelling less) I am in no doubt which means of transport I would now favour (I'll give you a clue: this Channel cover it extensively and very well!).
@fergie8936 Italy too has a good netwrok, and further east Poland's rail service has improved a huge amount over the past few years (both high speed and more traditional, for the want of a better word: I live there and rate it better than Britain's now).
That's an incredible speed and gorgeous design. I like the interior too, very modern but distinctly Chinese. Depressing to see high speed rail done so well after phase 2 of HS2 got cancelled. Not sure about the communal comb though lol
@@neutrino78x over certain distances trains are comparable or even faster when you factor in security checks, time travelling to the out of town airport and time spent waiting. The high speed network in Italy for example has massively reduced internal flights, which is much better for the environment. There's also personal preference, some people fear flying, I personally get a fair amount of physical discomfort during descent and landing, and enjoy going on the train and watching the country pass by.
@@holnrew "over certain distances trains are comparable or even faster" Yeah, 200 miles or less. Generally speaking the intercity distances in USA, Canada and Australia are much farther. Understand now? "The high speed network in Italy for example" Works because the distances are much shorter and the population density is MUCH higher.
Great video, small correction: at 10:40 that is definitely not the Yangtze River, which would have been even wider and the bridge would have been even taller. The route doesn't cross the river until after Nanjing.
This is a great video, thanks. It certainly shows China's dynamic overall infrastructure as well as the high speed train and rail network. The UK was once a world leader, but sadly now, has lost it's way, it needs to find the great vision it once had.
ask the people of Hong Kong if they would rather go back to living under the flag of Great Britain or have to live under communism. You might have missed all the protests they did recently. The Communist Party is removing more and more of their freedoms.
@@neutrino78x I live in Hong Kong, do you mind naming one single freedom that we used to have before Hong Kong was returned to China and its now been taken away by the communist party...I guess you enjoy watching BBC, CNN, Fox...etc...they have been lying about china and hongkong for decades.
you can order online on the high speed train and they will deliver food to you in the upcoming stops which depends on which stops where is the restaurant you order your food
The Beijing-Hong kong route being regularly operated by CR is more than enough justification to disprove americans who love to claim that trains won't work in their country because of their size 🙄 I also wish that HSR operators in the EU would try to match this level of comfort in their services. That would really help to move business travellers to trains
11:00 wait... I don't think you will cross Yangzi river if you just go from Shanghai to Nanjing... What you were crossing in the video is probably Yangcheng Lake (阳澄湖) in Suzhou.
Wow! Looks like a truly amazing trip, thanks for sharing it! Everything looks comfortable and clean, and I would love to go on a train that fast someday. The only thing that made me WTF? was the comb in the washroom... 😳
Yeah! I was WTF who would do hairdressing with a shared comb. But hey, when you go to a barbershop, they don't provide you with a "personal comb". They use a comb who was passed by every town hair and their lices. xD
I just finished watching WHOOSH, the Indonesion version of this, and both are amazing. It is incredible what the willingness to devote the resources to do a project of this caliber can produce. Who would want sleep on such a trip? I'd prefer to see the fantastic travel. If you sleep, you'd miss everything. Wow!!!!!!
The only other train I've seen that might be able to compete with this one would be the E5/H5 series Shinkansen from Japan. The business class seats are not quite as exclusive, and there is no restaurant car, but the E5 has much nicer food and drinks in Business Class (Gran Class), and the 2nd Class seats seem to be a bit nicer in the Shinkansen too. So they each have their up- and downsides compared to each other.
Perfect video! just one tip. When u got off the train and took UP escalator from the platform, which is the way to the waiting room for the transfer. Most train stations in China exit by taking DOWN escalator to the underground from the platform😂