Japan introduces world’s first dual-mode vehicle | Daily News

Japan introduces world’s first dual-mode vehicle

The train wheels keep the front tires of the vehicle up, while the rear wheels stay down to keep the DMV on track.
The train wheels keep the front tires of the vehicle up, while the rear wheels stay down to keep the DMV on track.

JAPAN: The world's first dual-mode vehicle has hit the ground on Saturday in the town of Kaiyo, Japan. It is said that the vehicle can run on roads as well as rail tracks.

The DMV looks like a minibus and runs on normal rubber tyres on the road. What makes this vehicle different from the rest is, it also has steel wheels in its underbelly which descend when it hits the rail tracks.

The front tyres are lifted off the track and the rear wheels stay down to propel the DMV onto the railway. This feature of effectively changing into a train-like module easily on a rail track is the first of its kind.

According to reports, the DMV can carry upto 21 passengers and runs at a speed of 60km/h on rail tracks and can go as fast as around 100km/h on public roads.

The vehicles could help small towns like Kaiyo with an aging and shrinking population, where local transport companies struggle to make a profit," Reuters quoted CEO of Asa Coast Railway company as saying. - THE NEW INDIAN EXPRESS


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