This article lists events related to rail transport that occurred in 1981.
Events
February
February 21 – MBTA discontinues passenger train service to Rhode Island.
February 26 – A TGV Sud-Est (trainset no. 16) breaks the world record for rail speed at 380 km/h (236 mph)[1] between Courcelles-Frémois (Côte-d'Or) and Dyé (Yonne), France.
April
April 3 – The inaugural runs of the first 2600-series cars are made. The 2600-series (2601–3200), built by the Budd Company of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, had increased interior floor space and seats that fold up for wheelchairs. After completing the order, Budd (later Transit America) retired from railcar manufacturing.
June 6 – In the Bihar train disaster, a passenger train carrying 800 or more passengers between Mansi and Saharsa, India, derailed and plunged into the Bagmati river while it was crossing a bridge. Estimates of the death toll range from 500 to 800.
July 17 – The Manchester–Sheffield–Wath Woodhead Line, carrying electric-hauled freight traffic through the Pennines in England, is closed and all British Rail Class 76 locomotives used on it are stored at Guide Bridge and Reddish before being scrapped.
July 26
The San Diego Trolley starts operation.[2] The starter line is the first entirely new light rail system in America and is credited with inspiring the choice of modes for later systems.
Yamanote Line introduces Automatic Train Control, city circle railway of Tokyo is now operated without lineside signals. Previously such system has been installed only at subways and high-speed lines.
^"개요 및 연혁" [Overview and History]. seoulmetro.co.kr (in Korean). Archived from the original on February 5, 2024. Retrieved July 12, 2024.
^"The business car"(PDF). Canadian Rail (360): 26–27. January 1982. Archived from the original(PDF) on September 24, 2015. Retrieved February 10, 2015.
(February 2005) Trains Timeline, Trains Magazine, p. 9