Coonoor to Ooty ride in Nilgiri Mountain Railway the little Blue Heritage Toy Train travel
The
Nilgiri Mountain Railway (
Tamil: நீலகிரி மலை ரயில்) is a railway in
Tamil Nadu, India, built by the
British in
1908, and was initially operated by the
Madras Railway. The railway still relies on its fleet of steam locomotives.
NMR comes under the jurisdiction of the newly formed
Salem Division. In
July 2005,
UNESCO added the Nilgiri Mountain Railway as an extension to the
World Heritage Site of
Darjeeling Himalayan Railway, the site then became known as "
Mountain Railways of India. After it satisfied the necessary criteria, thus forcing abandonment of the modernisation plans. For the past several years diesel locomotives have taken over from steam on the section betweenCoonoor and
Udhagamandalam. Local people and tourists have led a demand for steam locos to once again haul this section.
The NMR track is 1,
000 mm (3 ft
3 3⁄8 in) metre gauge and the railway is isolated from other metre gauge lines.
Between Mettupalayam and
Coonoor, the line uses the Abt rack and pinion system to climb the steepgradient. On this rack section trains are operated by 'X'
Class steam rack locomotives manufactured by the
Swiss Locomotive and Machine Works of
Winterthur in
Switzerland. These steam locomotives can be used on any part of the line (either with or without the rack section),but the newer diesel locomotives can operate on the entire section, between Mettupalayam and
Udagamandalam.This signals the beginning of the process to phase out the coal-fired vintage
Swiss engines that took scores of passengers on the rack and pinion track to Coonoor and Udhagamandalam, covering 41.8 kilometres (26.0 mi),
108 curves, 16 tunnels and 250 bridges
Hence, the
Southern Railway decided to replace the coal-fired locomotives. The work was entrusted to
Golden Rock Workshop of Southern Railway at
Tiruchirapalli. Each of the new engines weighs a little over 50 tonnes and cost Rs.10 crore.
The new engine has been provided with pilot and primary burners with separate tanks to hold about 850 litres of diesel and 2,250 litres of furnace oil. The hauling capacity of this new engine is 97.6 tonnes and it can run at a speed of 30 kilometres (19 mi) an hour in plains and at 15 kilometres (9.3 mi) an hour on a gradient.
Officials hoped to put the engine to use by Sunday on the Mettuppalayam--Coonoor section. The arrival of the new engines raises hopes of eliminating the disruption in service that occurred frequently over the last two years.
For long, the
X Class locomotives manufactured by Swiss Locomotive and Machine Works of Winterthur in Switzerland lent that distinct charm to NMR. These locomotives are six to eight decades old, railway officials said
The steam locomotives are always marshalled at the downhill (Mettupalayam) end of the train. The average gradient in this rack section is 1 in 24.
5 (4.08%), with a maximum of 1 in 12 (8.33%). Between Coonoor and Udagamandalam the train is operated by a YDM4 diesel locomotive using conventional rail adhesion principles. On this section the locomotive is always at the Coonoor end of the train as although the line is not steep enough to need a rack rail, the ruling gradient out of Coonoor is still very steep at 1 in 25 (4%).
As of 2007, there is one train a day over the rack section, which starts from Mettupalayam at 07:10 and reaches
Ooty at noon. The return train starts from Ooty at 14:00, and reaches Mettupalayam at 17:35. The train is scheduled to connect to the
Nilgiri Express, which travels from Mettupalayam to
Chennai via
Coimbatore. A summer special service is also run during the months of April and May, starting from Mettupalayam at 09:30 AM and from Ooty at 12:15 PM. Between Coonoor and Udagamandalam, there are four daily trains each way.
Even though the NMR stations have networked computerised ticketing systems for onward journeys, it still issues Edmondson style manual tickets for the Ooty-Mettupalayam journey to preserve the 'World Heritage Site' status of the railway. However, ticket booking is similar to other conventional trains and can also be done via the
Indian Railways' website. It is advisable to book tickets for this railway well in advance, especially during peak season.
The majority of repairs to the locomotives are carried out at the Coonoor shed but many of the steam locomotives have been rebuilt at the Golden Rock Workshops. Carriages are repaired at Mettupalayam but, like the locomotives, are taken to one of the big railway workshops for major work. Due to its popularity, a number of passengers using the NMR have requested that the
Southern Railways convert the section from Coonoor to Udagamandalam to steam locomotive, extending the present steam traction between Mettupalayam and Coonoor.
நீலகிரி மலை இரயில் சிறிய நீல பாரம்பரிய பொம்மை ரயில் பயண ஊட்டி சவாரி குன்னூர்