From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base
253 series
Japanese train type
Japanese train type
| Field | Value | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| name | 253 series | ||||
| image | 253 series 20080601.jpg | ||||
| imagesize | 300px | ||||
| caption | A 253 series train on a Narita Express service in June 2008 | ||||
| service | 1991–present | ||||
| manufacturer | Kinki Sharyo, Tokyu Car Corporation | ||||
| replaced | 189 series, 485 series (Nikkō sets only) | ||||
| successor | E259 series (Narita Express) | ||||
| yearconstruction | 1990–2002 | ||||
| yearservice | 19 March 1991 | ||||
| refurbishment | 2010 | ||||
| numberbuilt | 111 vehicles | ||||
| numberservice | 12 vehicles (2 sets) | ||||
| numberscrapped | 93 vehicles | ||||
| formation | 6 cars per trainset (3 cars in the past) | ||||
| fleetnumbers | OM-N1OM-N2 ( series) | ||||
| {{Collapsible list | title | Former | |||
| 1 | Ne01–Ne11 | ||||
| 2 | Ne101–Ne110 | ||||
| 3 | Ne201–Ne202 | ||||
| operator | |||||
| depots | Omiya | ||||
| lines | Yamanote Freight Line, Tohoku Main Line, Tobu Nikko Line | ||||
| carbody | Steel | ||||
| carlength | {{Plainlist | ||||
| * {{convert | 20930 | mm | ftin | abbr | on}} (end cars) |
| * {{convert | 20500 | mm | ftin | abbr | on}} (intermediate cars) |
| width | 2946 mm | ||||
| doors | 2 per side | ||||
| maxspeed | 130 km/h | ||||
| traction | {{Plainlist | ||||
| electricsystem | (overhead wire) | ||||
| collectionmethod | Pantograph | ||||
| bogies | DT69, TR254 (253-200 series only) | ||||
| brakes | Regenerative brake, electronically controlled pneumatic brakes | ||||
| safety | ATS-P, ATS-SN, ATC-5 (not used), Tōbu ATS (253-1000 series only) | ||||
| gauge |
- 20930 mm (end cars)
- 20500 mm (intermediate cars)
- Resistor control + field system superimposed field excitation control (253-0/200 series)
- Variable frequency (IGBT) (253-1000 series)
The 253 series is a DC electric multiple unit (EMU) train type operated by East Japan Railway Company (JR East). It was introduced on 19 March 1991 for use exclusively on the Narita Express, a limited express service linking Narita International Airport with stations in the Tokyo area. The 253 series trains were withdrawn from Narita Express services on 30 June 2010, with two trains redeployed on Nikkō and Kinugawa limited express services from June 2011.
Design
The design was overseen by industrial designer Kenji Ekuan, and the trains were manufactured by Kinki Sharyo and Tokyu Car Corporation. Sets were formed as three-car and six-car units, running as up to 12-car formations in service. From 1 October 2009, all three-car sets were removed from Narita Express operations.
It was the recipient of the 32nd Laurel Prize of the Japan Railfan Club. Extra sets were built in 2002 to cope with the increase in traffic during the 2002 FIFA World Cup. These sets were classified 253-200 series, and included minor improvements over the original 253-0 and 253-100 series sets, such as LED destination indicators, conventional rotating seats in standard class, and 2+1 seating in Green Cars.
Operations
''Nikkō/Kinugawa'' (from June 2011)
- Tohoku Main Line
- Tobu Nikko Line
- Tobu Kinugawa Line
- Yamanote Freight Line
''Narita Express'' (1991–2010)
- Chūō Main Line
- Narita Line (Airport branch)
- Sōbu Main Line
- Yamanote Freight Line
- Yokosuka Line
- Saikyo Line
Variants
1st batch
63 coaches (21 trains in three-car formation) were manufactured in 1990 and entered service in 1991. The types of coaches were the KuRo 253 (Green Car driving trailer), MoHa 253 (trailer) and KuMoHa 252 (driving trailer) coaches. Three-car sets were sometimes joined to form six-car formations.
2nd-4th batches
36 coaches were manufactured in 1992 to 1996 to cope with an increase in passenger traffic on the Narita Express, eventually enabling the 253 series trains to run in 12-car formations as well as the older 3/6-car formations. Minor changes were observed in the interior, notably that the seats had two colours, black and red.
5th batch
The fifth batch of 253 series trains (classified 253-200 series) consisting of two six-car sets, Ne201 and Ne202, were delivered from Tokyu Car in 2002 in anticipation of the 2002 FIFA World Cup which was expected to further increase passenger traffic on the Narita Express. Variable frequency traction systems were built into these trains, and they were fitted with DT69 and TR254 bogies. The interior differed from previous batches, with LED destination indicators, conventional rotating seats in standard class, and 2+1 seating in Green cars.
Formations
6-car sets Ne01–11

| Car No. | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | Designation | Numbering |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| M'c | M | T | M' | M1 | Tsc | |||
| KuMoHa 252 | MoHa 253 | SaHa 253 | MoHa 252 | MoHa 253-100 | KuRo 253 |
6-car set Ne101
| Car No. | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | Designation | Numbering |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| M'c | M | T | M' | M1 | Tsc | |||
| KuMoHa 252 | MoHa 253 | SaHa 253 | MoHa 252 | MoHa 253-100 | KuRo 253-100 |
3-car sets Ne102–110

| Car No. | 1 | 2 | 3 | Designation | Numbering |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| M'c | M | TsRc | |||
| KuMoHa 252 | MoHa 253 | KuRoHa 253 |
6-car sets Ne201–202

| Car No. | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | Designation | Numbering |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| M'c | M | T | M' | M1 | Tsc | |||
| KuMoHa 252-200 | MoHa 253-200 | SaHa 253-200 | MoHa 252-200 | MoHa 253-300 | KuRo 253-200 |
Each MoHa 253 car was equipped with one PS26 lozenge-type pantograph.
File:Kumoha252-8.jpg|KuMoHa 252 File:Moha253-8.jpg|MoHa 253 File:Saha253-8.jpg|SaHa 253 File:Moha252-8.jpg|MoHa 252 File:Moha253-108.jpg|MoHa 253-100 File:Kuro253-8.jpg| KuRo 253
Interior
The standard-class seating arrangement used in the original 253 series sets was unusual for Japanese limited express trains in consisting of European-style fixed four-seat bays. The seats were later rearranged in a fixed unidirectional layout facing four-seat bays in the centre of each car between 2003 and 2004. The green (first class) cars in the original three-car sets were classified as KuRo 253 or KuRo 253-100. The KuRo 253 cars had ten rows of 1+1 seating at a seat pitch of 1090 mm, with seats angled to face the windows, together with one 4-person compartment. The KuRo 253-100 cars had eight rows of seats arranged in a mixture of 2+1 and 1+1 at a seat pitch of 1340 mm, together with one 4-person compartment.
File:253 Narita Express standard class interior 20091024.JPG|General view of standard-class saloon with fixed unidirectional seating File:Seat of JR 253.JPG|Standard-class fixed seating File:JREastSeries253NormalCarSeat3.JPG|Standard-class rotating seating File:253 Narita Express Green car interior 20091024.JPG|General view of Green-class saloon File:JREastSeries253GreenCompartment.JPG|Green-class compartment in November 2007
Retirement
The 253 series trains were gradually replaced on Narita Express services from October 2009 by new E259 series EMUs, with the last trains operating until 30 June 2010. Most trains were subsequently withdrawn and scrapped, but two six-car sets, Ne201 and Ne202, were converted in late 2010 to become 253-1000 series (see below), and two three-car sets, Ne107 and Ne108, were sold to the Nagano Electric Railway (see below).
253-1000 series
The two newest-built sets, Ne201 and Ne202, underwent extensive refurbishment at JR East's Omiya Works and Tokyu Car Corporation's Yokohama factory to become 253-1000 series sets OM-N1 and OM-N2 for use on Nikkō and Kinugawa limited express services jointly operated with Tobu Railway from 4 June 2011, replacing the 485 series and 189 series EMUs currently used. Refurbishment includes entirely new interiors with monoclass seating configured with seat pitch increased from 1,020 mm to 1,100 mm, as well as replacement of main equipment. The total seating capacity for each six-car set is 290. Onboard announcements and passenger information displays are in four languages, Japanese, English, Chinese, and Korean.
On 19 December 2025, JR East announced that the 2531000 series fleet would receive a refreshed livery of blue and yellow to commemorate the 20th anniversary of Tobu through services. The first train to carry the new livery is scheduled to return to service in June 2026.
Formation
The 253-1000 series sets are formed as follows.
| Car No. | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | Designation | Numbering | Capacity | Weight (t) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| M'c | M2 | M' | M3 | T | Tc | |||||
| KuMoHa 252-1000 | MoHa 253-1000 | MoHa 252-1000 | MoHa 253-1100 | SaHa 253-1000 | KuHa 253-1000 | |||||
| 48 | 42 | 56 | 48 | 56 | 40 | |||||
| 39.6 | 40.2 | 36.6 | 39.9 | 29.1 | 34.3 |
The M2 and M3 cars are each fitted with one PS26A lozenge-type pantograph.
File:Kumoha252-1001.jpg|KuMoHa 252-1000 File:Moha253-1001.jpg|MoHa 253-1000 File:Moha252-1001.jpg|MoHa 252-1000 File:Moha253-1101.jpg|MoHa 253-1100 File:Saha253-1002.jpg|SaHa 253-1000 File:Kuha253-1002.jpg|KuHa 253-1000
Interior
File:JR 253 1000 01.jpg|The interior of car 6 in June 2013 File:253-1000 interior 20160925.jpg|The interior of car 3 in September 2016
Resale

Two three-car sets, Ne107 and Ne108, were sold to the Nagano Electric Railway for use on new Snow Monkey limited express services. The two sets, reclassified as 2100 series, entered service from February 2011 after modifications to allow wanman driver only operation.
Other appearances
The 253 series was featured in the train simulator Densha de Go! Final also in Densha De Go! Pocket Chuo line which runs on a (real-life) once-daily Narita Express service on the Chūō Main Line from Takao Station to Shinjuku Station.
References
References
- JR East, Chiba Branch. (27 May 2010). link
- "The Works of GK Design Group". GK Design Group Inc..
- Saka. Masahiro. Tetsudō Daiya Jōhō Magazine. (March 2014)
- JR Timetable, October 2009
- JRR. (December 2006)
- Railway Journal. (March 1991)
- Tetsudō Daiya Jōhō. (July 2009)
- (22 May 2011). "253系1000番台OM-N01編成が試運転". Koyusha Co., Ltd..
- link. (17 November 2010). Neko Publishing
- (2025-12-19). "". link
- Tetsudō Daiya Jōhō Magazine. (March 2011)
- Nagano Electric Railway. (3 June 2010). link
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
Ask Mako anything about 253 series — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.
Research with MakoFree with your Surf account
Create a free account to save articles, ask Mako questions, and organize your research.
Sign up freeThis content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.
Report