CGTN: Working on the train: Family inheritance in three generations

CGTN 

PR85960

 

BEIJING, Oct. 6, 2020 /PRNewswire=KYODO JBN/--

 

CGTN recently published an article about the "Family of train workers" -- three

generations have chosen the same occupation - train maintenance. They witnessed

the development of railway technology and the article shows their dreams on

Qinghai-Tibet Railway.

 

Video - https://cdn5.prnasia.com/202010/CGTN/Video.mp4 

 

Read the original article: here (https://news.cgtn.com/news/2020-10-05/Working-on-the-train-Family-inheritance-in-three-generations-UlhA4S7qQo/index.html?from=groupmessage&isappinstalled=0 )

 

 

"I'm continuing the dream of my father and grandfather," said Li Haifeng, a

train inspector at the Xining Depot – the place where the trains on the

Qinghai-Tibet Railway blew their first whistle.

 

Thirty-one-year-old Li has been investigating and troubleshooting undetected

faults in the facilities of each coach to ensure the safety of every train

journey. He's been in this occupation for seven years so far, the period of

which, nonetheless, is just a fraction of that of his father and grandfather.

 

The apple doesn't fall far from the tree

 

The story began in 1958 when his grandfather Li Wangfu, a native of east

China's Shandong, went from Dandong Railway Bureau to Xining on a job transfer.

"I arrived here on August 15, 1958," Li Wangfu told CGTN. In his 80s, he still

remembers the date clearly. After a long bumpy ride, what appeared before his

eyes was a barren land where the sun blazed down straight.

 

When the Xining railway depot was set up in October 1959, Li Wangfu became one

of the few train inspectors on the sparsely populated plateau. Back then, he

hunted troubles and made overhauls with a slew of clumsy tools in the daytime

and lived in a cellar, which he and his colleagues dug by themselves, on a dust

hill just south to the garage of the station, at night.

 

"At that time, we went to wherever they needed us," he said. Every day he went

off work with his coats soaked in black engine oil. Hard work paid off. He

became one of the first train inspection chiefs on the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau in

1984 – the year when the railroad linking Xining and Golmud, respectively the

first and second largest city of Qinghai Province, started operation.

 

Like father, like son. Li Xiujin's foray into train maintenance was hugely

impacted by his father Li Wangfu. "My father once took me on his train, I felt

it was really a good job," he recalled. In 1983, he was assigned to the Golmud

Depot. "Back then, it took us over two days to travel from Xining to Golmud,

where sands and pebbles were flying around."

 

Li Xiujin and his colleagues lived in a small, drafty mud hut and carried

repair hammers along with them to work every day. Over the past 37 years, he

witnessed the booming development of railway technologies, which has largely

facilitated train inspection.

 

The Qinghai railway system introduced an array of automatic detecting machines

in 2012, amid a nationwide tech-driven development momentum. Li Xiujin learned

state-of-the-art technology and became a TFDS (Train of Freight Failures Detection

System) centralized analyst. "Now I can check around 300 trains every day on computer."

 

Repair and maintenance work used to rely more on experience but now

"comprehensive skills" based on technical know-how are also required to

guarantee the safety of passengers, according to third-generation Li Haifeng.

 

From steam locomotives to electric trains

 

In the 1950s and 1960s, what the train offered was a bottom-rattling, days-long

ride -- that was the era when steam reigned railroads. Steam locomotives helped

thrust the world into the first industrial revolution and have since forged

ahead the human civilization for the next 150 years.

 

In China, the production and use of steam locomotives continued into the late

1980s though most of them were phased out at a much earlier time. In the 1960s,

steam trains led the development of the country's railroad networks, driving

its socio-economic development.

 

Li Wangfu witnessed the antiques being gradually sifted out and the debut of

internal combustion trains and then electric trains. "We're all electrified now."

 

Over the past decades, China's train technology is all but obsolete. His son

and grandson saw more unfathomable developments. "Previously on the

Xining-Golmud section, the train ran at merely some 50 kilometers per hour, but

now it could reach 160 kilometers," noted Li Haifeng.

 

Now China has the world's biggest high-speed railway network, along with

advanced inspecting methods for the facilities and equipment on the train.

 

"We have switched from heavy manual labor to mental work, just like a physician

in a hospital," said Li Xiujin, "We just sit indoors, watch pictures taken by high-speed

cameras, and report problems to on-site inspectors with the help of TFDS."

 

For Li Haifeng, the work is much less laborious but requires more expertise.

The train he works on has a UV filter inbuilt in its window, oxygen generators,

and automatic excrement processing devices amid a variety of new facilities.

 

"Working on the train is tough, as you need to take into account the safety of

every passenger. It's like being a 'doctor' who knows everything about the

train and gives the right prescription," Li Haifeng said.

 

SOURCE  CGTN  

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