History
With the opening of the Hokuriku Shinkansen extension from Nagano to Kanazawa on 14 March 2015, E7 sets began working Kagayaki, Hakutaka, and Tsurugi services alongside the JR West W7, which entered revenue service the same day. The 12-car sets seat 934 passengers across Gran Class, Green car, and ordinary-class accommodation and carry a maximum speed of 275 km/h.
On 12 October 2019, eight E7 and two W7 sets were damaged by Typhoon Hagibis floodwaters while stored at JR East's Nagano Shinkansen Vehicle Center; the Japanese source records these 10 sets (120 cars) as one-third of the Hokuriku fleet, and the two operators announced on 6 November 2019 that all would be scrapped. The E7 also entered Jōetsu Shinkansen service from the 16 March 2019 revision, working Toki services to Niigata and Tanigawa services to Echigo-Yuzawa; from 18 March 2023 the Jōetsu was operated solely by the E7 as its line speed rose from 240 to 275 km/h, replacing the older E2 series. Following the Hokuriku Shinkansen's extension from Kanazawa to Tsuruga on 16 March 2024, the Nagano-depot E7 sets and the W7 came to operate across all five prefectures of the Hokushin'etsu region.
Timeline
- 2014Revenue service begins on 15 March; the first three E7 sets (F1-F3) enter Asama service between Tokyo and Nagano on the Hokuriku (then Nagano) Shinkansen.
- 2015From 14 March, with the Hokuriku Shinkansen extension from Nagano to Kanazawa, E7 sets work Kagayaki, Hakutaka, and Tsurugi services alongside the JR West W7 series, which enters service the same day.
- 2019Eight E7 and two W7 sets (10 sets / 120 cars, one-third of the Hokuriku fleet) are damaged by Typhoon Hagibis floodwaters at the Nagano Shinkansen Vehicle Center; all are scrapped (scrapping announced 6 November 2019). Separately, the E7 enters Jōetsu Shinkansen service (Toki, Tanigawa) from the 16 March 2019 revision.
- 2024Following the Hokuriku Shinkansen extension from Kanazawa to Tsuruga on 16 March, the Nagano-depot E7 sets and the W7 come to operate across all five prefectures of the Hokushin'etsu region.
Sources
Facts last verified 3 June 2026.
Gallery 5 photos
Every photo for this page — tap any image to view it full-size. All from Wikimedia Commons (credit under each).