How to get from SINGAPORE to KUALA LUMPUR by Train

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  • Опубликовано: 13 окт 2022
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    Hello and welcome to Southeast Asia, today we're back in Singapore for an epic train journey!
    I will be giving you a step-by-step guide on this bargain journey, which involves taking a metro, a bus, and three trains in 12 hours to get from the amazing city state of Singapore, up to the Malaysian capital, Kuala Lumpur, so I hope you enjoy the video!
    Date of Filming: 22/7/22
    Camera: GoPro Hero 10 Black
    Operator: Singapore MRT / KTM (Malaysian Railways)
    Departure: Singapore City, Singapore
    Arrival: Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
    Cost: 80 MYR / SG$24.64 (£16.09, €17.93, US$17.47)
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Комментарии • 1,1 тыс.

  • @donperera2497
    @donperera2497 Год назад +29

    I travelled from Singapore to KL ( direct service) 50 years ago ( Sept. 1973) on a diesel locomotive. Left Singapore around 2pm and was supposed to reach KL by 7 pm. Broke down on the way and eventually reached KL around 1am! Unforgettable journey.

    • @NonstopEurotrip
      @NonstopEurotrip  Год назад +2

      It's a shame it's not possible anymore!

    • @bell-xk5dd
      @bell-xk5dd Год назад +4

      Great adventure 😂 envy you😂

  • @mak155
    @mak155 Год назад +105

    That drink is Teh Tarik, practically is just aerated black tea with milk. There use to be trains that runs directly from Kuala Lumpur Old Station to Singapore Tanjong Pagar with a duration of over 7 hours and there was even a overnight sleeper train. Gemas is the junction between the lines which runs to the East Coast and the West Coast.

    • @rezaalan3991
      @rezaalan3991 Год назад +2

      I'm curious, is that train out of service or still in service?

    • @mak155
      @mak155 Год назад +2

      @@rezaalan3991 A quick check with KTMB Online Ticketing, shows no journey available between KL Sentral and JB Sentral. That's as far that I know of.

    • @1911sg
      @1911sg Год назад +1

      @@rezaalan3991 That train is out of service.

    • @NonstopEurotrip
      @NonstopEurotrip  Год назад +6

      You have to book KL to Gemas, then Gemas to JB as separate tickets. Then use the shuttle train or bus to get to Singapore

    • @mak155
      @mak155 Год назад +4

      @@NonstopEurotrip and the connection time between the 2 trains seems to be always very long and mot much to do at Gemas station. There's not really much at Gemas except for a KFC.

  • @manseb5211
    @manseb5211 Год назад +98

    I had gone to KL countless times and the train journey had never failed to amazed me. We used to take the train from Singapore Tanjung Pagar station and Woodlands Station all the way to KL until it stopped and shifted the present arrangement in JB Sentral. Whtever the arrangements the beauty of travelling by train has always been a fascinating one for us. We enjoyed every moment travelling by train to KL. It brings back the good old days of being away from home.

    • @NonstopEurotrip
      @NonstopEurotrip  Год назад +5

      Yeah hopefully it will become much easier again in the future 😃

    • @manseb5211
      @manseb5211 Год назад +3

      Ya we are looking forward for the day when the speed train becomes a reality as wht was planned before Covid. It would take only 1 and the half hours to KL as was originally visionised.

    • @fauzirahman3285
      @fauzirahman3285 Год назад +1

      I remembered taking the train from Singapore to KL as a child but I can barely remember most of it. Wish I was able to take it again before they stopped it in Singapore.

    • @kuatkongket8893
      @kuatkongket8893 Год назад

      If not because of some greedy politician, Tanjong Pagar international station would have remained and the entire track will be electrified.

    • @Hahahaha10188
      @Hahahaha10188 6 месяцев назад

      @@kuatkongket8893tat land is sg not under Malaysia as the agreement already ended and they got to move!!

  • @SmokiesDen
    @SmokiesDen Год назад +48

    I did this trip in reverse but I started in Bangkok. I took the overnight train to Pedang Besar where you do border formalities and switch to a KTM train to Butterworth. Once there I then took the ferry to Penang to spend the night at the Eastern & Oriental. The next day I reversed and went back across the ferry to Butterworth then went via KTM ETS to KL and from there took the overnight sleeper train to JB then the little shuttle train across to Woodlands. That was back in 2015 for my trip to the Singapore Grand Prix.

  • @muhammadfairuzsamsi7209
    @muhammadfairuzsamsi7209 Год назад +9

    There used to be sleeper trains. Took the train from Singapore tanjong Pagar at night. Slept in their bunk beds sleeper carriages, woke up fresh by the time I reach KL in the morning.

    • @NonstopEurotrip
      @NonstopEurotrip  Год назад

      Yep, unfortunately no more!

    • @pavise6333
      @pavise6333 10 месяцев назад +1

      Ah...the memories. It was fun while it lasted.

  • @mercurygalaxii
    @mercurygalaxii Год назад +44

    Last time we used to have direct overnight train operated from central of Singapore to KL, 10.30pm departs from Tanjong Pagar and reach KL at 5am in the morning, you can choose first class cabin bed, second class bed or third class seat, it was wonderful experience.

    • @NonstopEurotrip
      @NonstopEurotrip  Год назад +6

      Shame thats not possible any more 🥲

    • @mercurygalaxii
      @mercurygalaxii Год назад

      @@NonstopEurotrip I saw another of your video did JB sentral to Tumpat which inspired me alot, I plan to cross the border and take another 22 hours overnight train to Bangkok

    • @JayAnuar
      @JayAnuar Год назад

      @@NonstopEurotrip Do you prefer slower trains like those of Sleeper ones or the faster trains? For many, they will prefer the faster ones, but for the nostalgic, i think they will love the slow sleeper trains.

    • @NonstopEurotrip
      @NonstopEurotrip  Год назад

      @@JayAnuar I love to experience all different types of trains!

    • @LM-zn6wb
      @LM-zn6wb Год назад +1

      I loved those sleeper trains. I used to sleep so well that when the guards came knocking at the doors to wake us up, I couldn't believe that we'd already arrived. It would be so good if they bring back those trains once the ETS and double tracking is completed. A slower train that takes overnight to get between KL and Singapore, stopping at the smaller towns to drop off and pick up passengers, goods and mail.

  • @codebluewacopsincrisis
    @codebluewacopsincrisis Год назад +11

    About 20 years ago my wife and I took a tra from Singapore to KL. The train terminal in Singapore was the most magnificent art deco structure said to be on official Malaysian land, in Singapore, we went first class on wooden seats for the 8 hour journey. The toilet was a hole in the floor straight onto the tracks. We only got off once to go through customs after we went across the Malacca Straights. Fantastic journey.

    • @aking9999
      @aking9999 Год назад +1

      I remember the hole in the floor !

    • @NonstopEurotrip
      @NonstopEurotrip  Год назад

      Thanks for sharing ☺️

    • @tweedy4sg
      @tweedy4sg 6 месяцев назад

      That's the Johor Straits you went across, not the Malacca Straits. The latter is ~30km wide at its narrowest point and there's no railway line to cross it.🤭

  • @jandroniol
    @jandroniol Год назад +132

    You realize that there doesn't need to be a high-speed train from Kuala Lumpur to Singapore, what they need is just... a direct train. With that alone, the route would be shortened to three hours, which is a more than reasonable time.

    • @NonstopEurotrip
      @NonstopEurotrip  Год назад +15

      Maybe not 3 hours, but yes I agree!

    • @yanc6727
      @yanc6727 11 месяцев назад +19

      Plans started in 2008, construction started in 2018, expected completion 2022, delayed to 2023, now further delayed till 2026. It's called the Gemas-JB Electrification and Double Tracking project, max speed 160km/h, KL to JB Sentral in 3.5hrs.

    • @helenndow1101
      @helenndow1101 10 месяцев назад +9

      I took a direct train in 1960

    • @azidinzidin9234
      @azidinzidin9234 10 месяцев назад +4

      I agree about that

    • @cleanenergyinside1921
      @cleanenergyinside1921 9 месяцев назад +7

      It used to have a diesel engined direct train. But the full electric train from Singapore will not take place. Instead we will have full electric from the southern most Malaysian city of Johor Baru all the way to Kuala Lumpur by 2025.
      The other posisble option is the high-speed bullet train that may or may not take place between Singapore and Kuala Lumpur. It looks however that it might take place as both Singapore and Malaysia are agreeable to undertake it in the near future.

  • @zanelindsay1267
    @zanelindsay1267 Год назад +4

    I appreciate the coverage and style of these travel videos with captions instead of narration. Great editing, well done!

  • @girlgirl4548
    @girlgirl4548 Год назад +155

    A lot of that "jungle scenery" is actually rubber or palm plantations.

    • @NonstopEurotrip
      @NonstopEurotrip  Год назад +18

      Whoops 🤭

    • @hedirepo2549
      @hedirepo2549 Год назад +9

      Unfortunately true 😁

    • @mindfreez05
      @mindfreez05 Год назад +15

      tbf i think it is better to cross a track across a plantation rather than a real thriving forest for the sake of the environment. but yeah i understand that it would be a better experience to see actual nature along the ride

    • @einspielen9965
      @einspielen9965 Год назад +7

      @@mindfreez05 the real problem is that the plantation has probably replaced the jungle that had been there before

    • @mindfreez05
      @mindfreez05 Год назад +2

      @Einspielen yes I am aware but the chances of the government removing plantations and reforesting them as before are basically 0. Thus, rather than they deforest any more natural habitats, this way is probably the best way period.

  • @SupremeLeaderKimJong-un
    @SupremeLeaderKimJong-un Год назад +47

    I've been to Singapore back in June 2018 and I gotta say, I had an amazing time. Singapore is blessed with a prime location on important shipping route and has a wonderful skyline. Their metro is far better than those in North America. Hope to visit again someday.

  • @fsmnt
    @fsmnt Год назад +5

    I did this trip as my first solo trip out of Singapore in 2017 and this brings back nostalgia

  • @railvlogger1439
    @railvlogger1439 Год назад +6

    I remember taking an overnight sleeper tran from KL to Hat Yai in Thailand. I then took another overnight train to Bangkok. I booked a first class sleeping compartment. I was the only one in the whole carriage. Great memories.

  • @theintrovertadventurer9640
    @theintrovertadventurer9640 Год назад +190

    Nice trip report! It would have been awesome if Malaysia and Singapore had built their high speed rail line as originally planned.

    • @NonstopEurotrip
      @NonstopEurotrip  Год назад +24

      Hopefully in the future 🙂

    • @neeha9449
      @neeha9449 Год назад +30

      As a Malaysian myself... yea...
      Too bad it caught up with the political crisis, along with other rail projects..
      Hopefully one day!

    • @nohai5960
      @nohai5960 Год назад +11

      @@neeha9449 Gonna blame your gov for flipping prata on the agreement cost.

    • @senankamalakanan5128
      @senankamalakanan5128 Год назад +12

      @@nohai5960 lucky they did not build or it's a lost for Malaysia. HSR will only push cost along the line much higher for local and the actually already poor Singaporeans will benefit just because currency value which brings zero benefits to locals not realise opportunity. Overall good it got dropped. It's not like SG is Japan right to offer anything useful, just a financial hub.

    • @SuperValue350
      @SuperValue350 Год назад +4

      @@senankamalakanan5128 Not surprised that a keling has no foresight at all

  • @akarablade9481
    @akarablade9481 Год назад +5

    I did the Singapore to Hatyai using the locomotive & ETS, then Hatyai to Bangkok using the Thaksinarath sleeper train before the pandemic struck.

  • @sausage_lord
    @sausage_lord Год назад +23

    I remember doing this exact journey in reverse in 2018. It’s long, but enjoyable. Had a long layover in Gemas too. Ended up in a KFC cos there was nothing else there.
    Nice video - brought back some great memories. Malaysia is a fantastic country!

    • @NonstopEurotrip
      @NonstopEurotrip  Год назад +2

      I went to the same KFC 😆

    • @luke211286
      @luke211286 Год назад

      I think KFC's in Asia taste light years better than the ones in Europe,so that in itself is a worthwhile food experience

  • @clarizpro
    @clarizpro Год назад +34

    Took the ETS from KL Sentral to Butterworth Penang. I love it when the train passes Bukit Merah lake garden, it gives the Spirited Away vibes.

    • @cwong2310
      @cwong2310 Год назад +2

      Hi, how long is the journey from KL Sentral to Butterworth Penang?

    • @clarizpro
      @clarizpro Год назад +3

      @@cwong2310 around 3 hours + to 4 hours.

    • @neeha9449
      @neeha9449 Год назад

      Best part of the journey indeed.
      It has better vibes before the new viaduct completed, where the train crosses through a line of land through the lake!

  • @Krishnantech
    @Krishnantech Год назад +12

    Nice video of modern meter gauge train sets in use today. On my travel in 1980 the train was a diesel locomotive hauled KTM night sleeper-train to Singapore leaving at 22:00 Hrs. Document check was done aboard the train at Johor Bahru on the following morning, and the train arrived around 08:00 Hrs at Tanjong Pagar, Singapore. The locomotive used was similar to the YDM-4 locos used in India. It was a comfortable and memorable journey.

    • @LakshmananLM
      @LakshmananLM Год назад

      Still the same diesel loco from gemas to JB. Ircon did much of the rail infrastructure. The coaches were built by the ICF Chennai, I believe. Once double tracking and electrification is complete (who knows when..) we'll finally enter the 20th century in transport (no typo)..

    • @NonstopEurotrip
      @NonstopEurotrip  Год назад

      It's a shame it's so long winded now!

  • @shawnvj1153
    @shawnvj1153 Год назад +2

    hello bro this brought back memories when i use to take trains to KL back in the 90s.. Layang Layang ..Gemas OMG ...thanks bro wish your channel grows all the best .........

  • @user-ep2eq5wd8p
    @user-ep2eq5wd8p 7 месяцев назад +1

    I love your videos and live vicariously through them thank you

  • @thejimu
    @thejimu Год назад +14

    I did SG - KL by train when it was all a direct route by diesel loco (no change at Johor). Was great and hope that comes back when electrification is completed!

  • @tdb7992
    @tdb7992 Год назад +54

    As soon as you stepped outside of Woodlands station and onto the bus, I could 'feel' the humidity hit me. I'm Australian and spent a lot of time in KL and Singapore. You never get used to that humidity if you didn't grow up with it. Great video!

    • @NonstopEurotrip
      @NonstopEurotrip  Год назад +6

      Ikr I remember the first time I stepped off a plane on to a non AC jetbridge at Changi 15 years ago, I was like woahhhhhhhhhhh

    • @xapaga1
      @xapaga1 Год назад +23

      Whenever I visit the UK, I try to explain to the locals how humid East/Southeast Asia can be---with no success. They just reply, "Well, the UK is just as wet."

    • @NonstopEurotrip
      @NonstopEurotrip  Год назад +5

      @@xapaga1 🤣🤣🤣

    • @Chuiboo
      @Chuiboo Год назад +4

      Humidity in Hanoi and Hong Kong is far worse. Mid-June to early September is the worst time to visit either city.

    • @andre__lim
      @andre__lim Год назад +4

      Even growing up and living in Singapore, I am still not used to it. Always dread coming back from cooler climes.

  • @dennyrobbins7644
    @dennyrobbins7644 Год назад +1

    Another great video as always. I’m always looking forward to seeing your next video. Keep up the great work. Be safe out there.

  • @cjadixon
    @cjadixon 10 месяцев назад +1

    Fantastic. I've never thought of exploring Malaysia, but now I think I might have to. This is so educational and inspiring. 2024 I think might be the go

  • @nikhatparween5536
    @nikhatparween5536 Год назад +10

    The best thing about ur video now is that u r exploring other countries too rather than just traveling in Europe in same cities again and again. But I have always loved ur videos.
    Love from India 🇮🇳❤️❤️❤️

    • @NonstopEurotrip
      @NonstopEurotrip  Год назад +3

      Absolutely, got a whole world to see!

    • @docman6157
      @docman6157 Год назад +1

      @@NonstopEurotrip THE CHANNEL NAME IS MISLEADING!!

    • @NonstopEurotrip
      @NonstopEurotrip  Год назад

      @@docman6157 do you watch @mrwhosetheboss?

    • @docman6157
      @docman6157 Год назад

      @@NonstopEurotrip no why?

    • @luke211286
      @luke211286 Год назад +1

      @@docman6157 No it ain't. Almost 100% of the channel's content is about Europe. It's nice to have some special episodes as a break from the main theme at times

  • @julieannejade7719
    @julieannejade7719 Год назад +3

    Wow, very clear guidance. Even me as singaporean, not sure how to travel, the whole journey via public transport. Thanks so much

  • @flowerviolence2760
    @flowerviolence2760 Год назад

    Always wanted to do this! Thank you for the detailed and informative video!

  • @seanh2286
    @seanh2286 Год назад

    Another good video. Thanks for pointing out all the wheelchair accessibility.

  • @Scaleyback317
    @Scaleyback317 Год назад +5

    I used to do a similar trip from my family home in kluang to Kuala Lumpur. Stay overnight at Bourne School, Kuala Lumpur and take the train the following morning on to Tapah Road Station where we would then get a bus to Slim School, Cameron Highlands.
    The trains were old and rickety but were a fantastic experience for a 12 year old surround by Ghurka and Malaysian soldiers and eating Nasi Goreng from an open galley on the train. The finiest Nasi Goreng I ever tasted.
    This whole arrangement of getting from Singapore to KL seem very complicated and convoluted when just used to get the same train over the causeway into SIngapore.
    I am shocked at the development of JB and northern Singapore but it has been almost 60 years and I shouldn't be surprised by it I guess. Wonderful memories,

    • @NonstopEurotrip
      @NonstopEurotrip  Год назад

      Yes agreed. It needs to made simpler again!

    • @miltonmiles6324
      @miltonmiles6324 Год назад +1

      Welcome back anytime Scaley!

    • @PrograError
      @PrograError 10 месяцев назад

      TBH this was already simplified...
      Back when it was the old terminus at Tanjong Pagar, you essentially enter Malaysia before you actually exited Singapore. That Arrangement was a pain point (one of many) of the SG Govt since they had wanted it be "this" since the SG govt moved their facilities there (Woodlands TC) like in the 2000s.
      Well in a few more years (I'd say a decade if SG govt doesn't whip the malaysia side too much, but the plans is for opening in the 2030...) things might be just a lot more simple... with Spanish solution RTS on both side with border pre-clearance on either side (similar setup to the HK HSR station border clearance, I think?)

  • @zhining911
    @zhining911 Год назад +13

    I used to take the KTM train last time when I was a baby till primary school (to around the year 2012). Me and my parents would always travel to Johor Bahru to take the train from there (previously, KTM train used to be at the old station before they change the location to the current one near the City Mall area). It was a one way long trip from JB to Kulau Lampur (before a new rule applies that you need to alight at Gemas to change your train) that took about 8 hours. Also take the train back all the way to Singapore from KL too that also took about the same timing hour (I remember there is always a train departing delay, for example, train suppose to arrive at KL station at 2pm and delay till 2.30pm). I like taking the train because it was all about adventure, but it does sure have uncomfortable moments like the cigarrete smells in the train carriage and it can be dangerous if the train is in the middle of the flood (met a flood once back then).
    Other things I remember that are related to KTM train is the blue stripes chair that are attached, and behind the chair has a small table for you to put your food on (you just need to turn the knob to open that small table), the KTM train blue ticket,the toilets, the fixed table at every front (and back row?) of the train carriage, the whistle when the train is about to arrive and the red and green flags waving (at night, they use the torchlight). I remember once when I take the train, the train stops at a station (maybe the train driver is going for some breaks for some mins before continuing the journey) and me and my father step out of the train to take in some fresh air before returning back to the train prior the train departing

  • @crosbyong
    @crosbyong Год назад +2

    Thank you for recording this journey!😊

  • @davidh9844
    @davidh9844 Год назад +1

    Great video. We were in Singapore for 2 days last month, cruising. I ran into trouble with metro - couldn't buy a ticket. I was unaware that they use the credit card tap there - no one informed us. We discovered that trick in Australia. Brilliant idea. What a difference 2 years and a pandemic make.

  • @richard-riku
    @richard-riku Год назад +3

    Four trains and a bus! Imagine if Paris - Brussels was like this. Somebody should knock the heads of Malaysia and Singapore together to get a through service on one train. It's like everything has been done to make the journey as inconvenient as possible. And the ridiculous 2h wait for connecting train at Gemas. In Japan there would be a "relay" service and cross platform transfer to the connecting train, which would depart a couple of minutes after you arrive in Gemas.

    • @NonstopEurotrip
      @NonstopEurotrip  Год назад +2

      Tell me about it. Annoyingly there USED to be a direct train 😂

  • @zachpoon3482
    @zachpoon3482 Год назад +48

    Commenting as Malaysian, I hope that our govt will bring back HSR project that links Malaysia and SG and it will be way faster to travel between countries.. it is so dissapointing after countless of times this project has been cancelled as from my perspectives it is a loss to Malaysia for not building it way earlier

    • @NonstopEurotrip
      @NonstopEurotrip  Год назад +3

      I hope so too!!!!

    • @yong9613
      @yong9613 Год назад +2

      Won't happen anytime soon...
      There's ticket cost issue
      There's demand issue
      There's also that 'transportation operates at a loss' all over the world issue.

    • @markvms4377
      @markvms4377 Год назад +5

      @@yong9613 and korruption issue

    • @sookliantan
      @sookliantan Год назад

      Very much agree with you. A great loss

    • @nur_aryani
      @nur_aryani Год назад

      @@xarifalee8088> the rail tracks needs to be upgraded to accommodate the new ETS trains. KTMB has to upgrade those tracks before the ETS can be extended all the way to JB Sentral. Last I heard, the Johor local govt is pushing for it…but 🤷🏽‍♀️🤷🏽‍♀️🤷🏽‍♀️🤷🏽‍♀️

  • @claesblomquist3510
    @claesblomquist3510 Год назад

    Excellent video. I'm planning to make this trip, flying from Sweden to Singapore . Thanks for posting 👍

    • @NonstopEurotrip
      @NonstopEurotrip  Год назад

      You're welcome. Check out my bus video on the same route too 😸

  • @Tbpker22
    @Tbpker22 Год назад +2

    Another great video to celebrate your 50,000 subscribers - thank you "Nonstop Asiatrip"!

  • @scottyerkes1867
    @scottyerkes1867 Год назад +7

    Interesting journey. Singapore is beautiful. Nice scenery. Thanks Max.😀💚👌

  • @SSaifuddin20121960
    @SSaifuddin20121960 3 месяца назад

    Oh boy, you took me down the memory line. I traveled between Bangkok, Malaysia, and Singapore while my stay in Thailand in 90s. Railway service during those days was also great and enjoyable.
    Love from a Pakistani American ❤

  • @My6838
    @My6838 Год назад +1

    Very nice and helpful video, we now know another way to travel between Malaysia and Singapore where I got to stay for 3 months in the 80's.

  • @franciscusgomarus5086
    @franciscusgomarus5086 Год назад +4

    I remember visiting KL from Singapore travelling the old KTM Butterworth Express back in the 1980s. Simpler and better times.

  • @abieSabdun
    @abieSabdun Год назад +5

    Welcome to Malaysia sir!.. I would says i love it when i first saw you were about to step on Southeast Asia train routes..Thank you so much for showing us around and hope you enjoy your train trips wherever you are..stay safe and do enjoy Malaysia to the fullest..

  • @ctyl5686
    @ctyl5686 Год назад

    Another excellent video - thank you.

  • @deco983
    @deco983 Год назад +1

    Great trip report! Thank you!!

  • @AverytheCubanAmerican
    @AverytheCubanAmerican Год назад +85

    Trains from Malaysia used to go even deeper into Singapore, down from Woodlands Train Checkpoint to Tanjong Pagar with Bukit Timah station in between. But this all ceased in 2011. What happened? Well under the Railway Act 1918, the land that made up the railway was given to the Federated Malay States government from the Straits Settlements for a period of 999 years. So basically, even after Singapore was kicked out of Malaysia in 1965, this land would still be owned by the Malaysian government. Singapore wanted the land returned to them.
    Singapore moved their immigration/customs from Tanjong Pagar to Woodlands in 1998, but Malaysia insisted on keeping theirs at Tanjong Pagar. In other words, people were granted entry into Malaysia before clearing Singaporean immigration, which made no sense. To circumvent the problem, Malaysian officers didn't stamp the passports, but by doing this...Singaporeans were arrested in Malaysia because they weren't stamped, thus bringing to light the issue of Malaysia keeping their customs/immigration at Tanjong Pagar. Malaysia and Singapore finally agreed to scrap the Railway Act at a leaders' retreat in 2010 (they first did so in 1990, but there was a deadlock), where Malaysia was allowed to remain at Woodlands Train Checkpoint while the rest of the line would be truncated and become a rail trail (called the Rail Corridor). Bukit Timah station remains conserved, while Tanjong Pagar station is preserved.

    • @NonstopEurotrip
      @NonstopEurotrip  Год назад +17

      It's sad these stopped. It would have been much more convenient 🙂

    • @Ruriko.Y
      @Ruriko.Y Год назад +11

      Singapore wasn't kicked out of Malaysia, they chose to leave.

    • @AverytheCubanAmerican
      @AverytheCubanAmerican Год назад +38

      @@Ruriko.Y "Chose" Lee Kuan Yew was literally upset because he wanted Malaysia and Singapore to remain a union. They were expelled by the Malaysian Parliament, and Singaporean MPs BOYCOTTED the vote. So no, they didn't choose to. They wanted to coexist peacefully, but the Malay government wanted to kick them out to end the bloodshed
      The PAP (People's Action Party; Singapore's main party) made MULTIPLE attempts to keep the union, but Malaysian Parliament voted 126 to 0 on August 9, 1965 (once again, no Singaporean MPs voted). Saying it was "their choice" is nothing more than a blatant lie. But it worked out in the end as Singapore became an economic powerhouse.

    • @zulakmal11
      @zulakmal11 Год назад +7

      @@Ruriko.Y Go back to learn a proper history 🤦

    • @tigerwild1164
      @tigerwild1164 Год назад +1

      這條鐵路短期而言是更有利於大馬
      但是長遠而言,其實更有利於新加坡,而且是新加坡必須的
      人越聰明,越容易短視,新加坡便是如此

  • @mcciaccio
    @mcciaccio Год назад +6

    I did this trip many years ago and then took a train into Thailand, but it was a much older train system. This seems so much nicer.

    • @NonstopEurotrip
      @NonstopEurotrip  Год назад +2

      Yes, and it'll be improved even more soon with a direct train!

  • @xfirefox_x
    @xfirefox_x Год назад +2

    Great video. Would love to see you make a trip vlog from Kuala Lumpur to Bangkok by train

  • @jgodfrey546
    @jgodfrey546 Год назад

    Nice video! Been following your travels on Twitter...quite the journey you'de taking... Stay safe...

  • @complainqueen
    @complainqueen Год назад +4

    Love your videos! Satisfying my wanderlust as well as provides me info for train travel! Thank you for that! ❤
    If I may, the tickets for the border shuttle between Singapore and Malaysia is available for booking online and it is highly recommended if your trip is on Friday, Saturday and/or Sunday as tickets for the weekends sell out fast.

  • @emilykosoff6577
    @emilykosoff6577 Год назад +15

    I loved Singapore when I was there 😊, their trains puts many to shame with how efficient they are

    • @NonstopEurotrip
      @NonstopEurotrip  Год назад +6

      Oh totally. It's easy in a small country tho eh

    • @PhiloSurfer
      @PhiloSurfer Год назад +10

      @@NonstopEurotrip Not so easy. Do you know how many small countries there are in the world that are failed states and many more with poor infrastructure? What is it about big countries that makes it difficult to have good infrastructure? The simple solution is to do it at state level, county level or province level. If that is still to big, do it at city level. In fact, that was how a gigantic country like China managed to develop. Deng Xiao Ping went to Singapore and liked what he saw. So, he started to copy from Singapore - first experimenting in the coastal cities, then moving westward into the second-tier cities and eventually into the western less developed third and fourth-tier cities. The rest is history. So, it is not the size of the country that matters - it is how the country is managed.

    • @mvp2526
      @mvp2526 Год назад +5

      are u sure or not?Wait till you take our old mrt trains during peak hour with aircon that is not cold sometimes even worst breakdown during moring peak hour every few moths.The worst are the air con,SIngapore red line and green line trains pretend to have aircon but not cold one,plus if you got the hot sun shinng on the mrt windows,it absorb all those heat in the cabin.

    • @Neville60001
      @Neville60001 Год назад

      @@PhiloSurfer, China is a dictatorship run by one party that can afford to do that; many countries are _not_ dictatorships, so what was done in Singapore and China can't be done everywhere (for example, the president of the United States _could_ use an executive order to get something he wanted done, but because the USA is a democracy, he can't do so [why Obama couldn't get his nationwide HSR project off of the ground and why Biden similarity can't do the same with his railway & infrastructure improvement plan] except for a few things. ) Building new infrastructure takes time, and democracy/ the democratic process can't be run roughshod over just to get something done, which is how most democracies are.

    • @byteme9718
      @byteme9718 Год назад +1

      @@NonstopEurotrip Small country? Do you realise how many live there and rely totally on public transport? It's not size that determines how efficiently Singapore deal with everything. In the west the police can't manage the crime in a single housing block, Singapore has over 10,000 HDB blocks alone.

  • @RaviSingh-cr9mo
    @RaviSingh-cr9mo Год назад

    Thank you 😊 .. I really absolutely loved your video

  • @mattp558
    @mattp558 Год назад +2

    Most of the 'Jungle scenery' was palm oil plantations. I recently travelled from KLto George Town, there's some nice forest views on that train journey.

  • @yum8171
    @yum8171 Год назад +3

    the Gemas station is definitely much much improved from the days when I first visited more than 30 years ago. Back then it was very basic and rustic.

  • @HBC101TVStudios
    @HBC101TVStudios Год назад +10

    Next time if you’re in Malaysia again feel free to try the Rakyat Timuran Express aka the Jungle Train from Johor Bahru to Tumpat, Kelantan. It is Malaysia’s only locomotive hauled sleeper train service which takes around 17 hours 30 minutes from JB to Tumpat.

    • @NonstopEurotrip
      @NonstopEurotrip  Год назад +9

      I'm just editing that video now. It'll be released in a few weeks :-)

    • @Hazemann
      @Hazemann Год назад +1

      Hok aloh iklan kelate boh. Ambo penah naik skali jah ketapi tido tu dr wakaf bharu ke jb sentral & patah balik

  • @darrenchin_
    @darrenchin_ Год назад +2

    Wow I live in Singapore and I didn't even know about some aspects of the checkpoint train service. Thanks!

  • @georghackl6178
    @georghackl6178 Год назад +1

    Gefällt mir sehr gut,warte gerne bis alles fertig ist! Bin 1979 mit dem Bus von Singapore nach Mallaca gefahren in 7 Stunden, das war noch ein Abenteuer:))

  • @swfx1015
    @swfx1015 Год назад +9

    The train you've ridden on the ETS is the KTM Class 93/1 which is used for Silver and Gold services. However, a newer variant of the train, Class 93/2 is used for Platinum services. It features a more modern interior and a "Business Class" carriage.

    • @NonstopEurotrip
      @NonstopEurotrip  Год назад +4

      I've already filmed it, will release early next year 👍🏻

    • @marsillinkow
      @marsillinkow 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@NonstopEurotripwill this be coming out anytime soon?

    • @NonstopEurotrip
      @NonstopEurotrip  11 месяцев назад

      @@marsillinkow In 4 weeks

  • @cherylsemrau7100
    @cherylsemrau7100 Год назад +5

    I wish Canada would have those platform doors. I wanted to see the hotel where you stayed. Amazing trip.. I would lover to go on that trip.

  • @anthonymanderson7671
    @anthonymanderson7671 11 месяцев назад

    I'm glad you enjoyed the trip and saw the works of a high-speed rail.

  • @iideal
    @iideal Год назад

    Miss trip by train. Thanks for sharing this video

  • @varietychannelHD
    @varietychannelHD Год назад +4

    Hi, a subscriber from Malaysia. Always catching up for your euro trips. Good to know you visited my country :) Hope you enjoyed your stay and come again :) ( The name of the drink is sorted, so now I need to tell you the Nasi Lemak you bought for RM15, you may buy elsewhere from RM5 price range. Buying food at terminals can be costly)

    • @NonstopEurotrip
      @NonstopEurotrip  Год назад +1

      Yeah it was more for convenience 🤣 I absolutely love Malaysia 😍

    • @varietychannelHD
      @varietychannelHD Год назад

      @@NonstopEurotrip cool! Glad you enjoyed your time here :)

  • @AndrewG1989
    @AndrewG1989 Год назад +17

    Those high speed trains are amazing. Also Singapore is beautiful. Great video as always. 😊

  • @dayarao1555
    @dayarao1555 Год назад

    infomative video.Glad to see this video travel by train. Welcome to Malaysia.

  • @houseclearance7509
    @houseclearance7509 6 месяцев назад

    Years ago I walked from Woodlands MRT to JB across the causeway. Quite a memorable trip. Thank you for showing this.

  • @akmaldarari8264
    @akmaldarari8264 Год назад +44

    Come to Indonesia, you can try the trains that has many beautiful sceneries like mountains, jungle, and also beach. (Funfact: It's only approx 1:15-1:30 hours flight from Singapore to Jakarta)
    I recommend you to take Argo Bromo Anggrek train (from Jakarta to Surabaya vv, make sure you take the morning trip because it has 2 trips daily at morning and night), you can see beach sceneries in Central Java.
    And also Argo Wilis train (from Surabaya to Bandung vv, it's a daytime trip) and Argo Parahyangan train (from Jakarta to Bandung vv, with various schedule from morning until evening)
    You can also reach the tourist destinations from Jakarta to Yogyakarta by train (Make sure take the daytime trip because the sceneries are also great) and also Bali (Caveat: You must change and overnight in Surabaya or Yogyakarta if you want continuously take the daytime trip trains. Also the train only takes you to Ketapang (That's the nearest port to takes a ferry into Bali) and after reaching Bali (at Gilimanuk port) you must take public buses to Denpasar (The largest city in Bali, the planes from any destinations usually lands in here) since there are no trains in Bali)

    • @NonstopEurotrip
      @NonstopEurotrip  Год назад +5

      Don't worry, I definitely will! 🤗 Thanks for the information ℹ️

    • @wongyoonchark5050
      @wongyoonchark5050 Год назад

      乘高铁看青山绿水:
      那巍巍峨峨的青山呀 它簡直是一個沉默的大漢
      那崗巒起伏的青山呀 它挺著胸膛 聳著肩 迸出堅強的肌肉 握緊粗大的拳頭 站定穩健的腳步 展開莊嚴的容顏 它像在競武場中 準備決死奮鬥 經千萬年沒有絲毫改變
      那漪漣涓涓的綠水呀 它簡直是一個絕世的佳人
      那細流淙淙的綠水呀 它唱著戀歌彈著琴 柔順溫和的氣質 清白純潔的胸襟 微風激動笑窩深 波紋蕩漾舞輕盈 它像在娛樂場中 給人無上安慰 歷千萬年永遠這樣年青。

    • @afizi1213
      @afizi1213 Год назад +2

      Oh, yes, I heard Indonesians say that there is a fast train on the island of Java, from where to where

    • @syadzafi19
      @syadzafi19 Год назад +3

      @@afizi1213 bandung to jakarta fot high speed railway

    • @afizi1213
      @afizi1213 Год назад +2

      @@syadzafi19 🦆uuu if indonesia made at Sumatera its super easy cause they long is far from south to acheh

  • @thomasroell8979
    @thomasroell8979 Год назад +8

    A very interesting video, thank you.

  • @Thom-TRA
    @Thom-TRA Год назад +1

    Fascinating video! Would love to do this trip someday.

    • @NonstopEurotrip
      @NonstopEurotrip  Год назад

      Trains are awesome does Asia is something I'm down for 😍

  • @Akideoni
    @Akideoni Год назад

    Many thanks* for featuring the trip it had been years since I last took those trains.

  • @reddragon2k6
    @reddragon2k6 Год назад +8

    A lot of people are upset about the cancellation of the KL-Singapore HSR, which I also find to be tragic, 'cause we're building a tiny little 1-km or so MRT bridge to JB instead >:(
    However, I also know of the KTM ETS being extended down from Gemas to JB Sentral station. If they can extend it down to Woodlands, and maybe even start an SG-KL express service, we could have trips from SG to KL at around 3-3.5 hours. Not as fast as the HSR would have been, but still faster than driving (especially when crossing the 1km causeway can take a 3-4 hours sometimes...)
    We can only hope now. Great video too!

    • @NonstopEurotrip
      @NonstopEurotrip  Год назад

      That will be EXCELLENT!! 😎✌🏻

    • @PTSG77-yy8lk
      @PTSG77-yy8lk Год назад

      From a sabahan point of view, the ETS stopped at Gemas because to Mahathir and the subsequent Federal government characters, they don't want to benefit Johir Sultan because other than private owners he owns all the rest of the land under state government....the same has been happening in Sabah which has minimum developments despite all the oils and gas profits stolen by the federal governments...no new roads and NO railway developments too....Najib did introduce the Pan-Borneo highway but it was cut into so many packages it was obviously just to benefit the clonies..😅

  • @vaughnwilliams1208
    @vaughnwilliams1208 Год назад +11

    On the days before public holidays the normal road immigration centres get extremely busy so taking that train is a Great option.
    The Singapore Woodlands station doesn't seem to have a metro station which makes that journey more difficult.
    Malaysian railway services has made the 2 border crossings (also Thailand) much more difficult. The 2 hour wait in Gemas was poor too, the diesel locomotives used to go KL to JB direct.
    Most of the "jungle views" were palm oil plantations , but attractive all the same.
    My train journeys there were all overnight ones in sleeper trains JB to KL and Butterworth to Bangkok but they've all stopped .

    • @NonstopEurotrip
      @NonstopEurotrip  Год назад +3

      I can't wait for a direct SG to KL connection to come back!

    • @LM-zn6wb
      @LM-zn6wb Год назад +1

      @@NonstopEurotripin the 'old' days of the diesel locomotives between Singapore and KL, up until around 2000, even though it was no train change over, there was still a bit of waiting time at Gemas. The whole journey was on a single track and if an oncoming train was late, the other train just had to wait at Gemas. The delay could take as long as an hour and a half. The ETS and double tracking will definitely make things better.

    • @sc5252
      @sc5252 8 месяцев назад +1

      In fact, about 40 years ago, 1982 or so. You can take a train from Tanjung pagar, all the way to Butterworth without changing train. This train stopped at KL old station for about 30 minutes. You can buy food and drink from the KL station. It took about 13---14 hours including all stopping time. It was called Express Rakyat, or People Express! This was a diesel engine train. It had less stops along the roughly 720 km trip.
      I will prefer that direct train if I have to take a train from Singapore to Penang. Hopefully they will operate a direct electric train from JB to Butterworth by 2025 or 2026. If so, by electric direct train, it will be about 8 hours ?

  • @HumbertoMesa
    @HumbertoMesa Год назад +1

    Thanks for the epic ride !!! 🇺🇾

  • @allenmegane
    @allenmegane Год назад +1

    wow i worked in KL years ago before i decided to live as a European Citizen (Dublin) but there was no train that time just the bus from KL to Singapore.. thanks for bring me back my memories in Kuala Lumpur days.. you're awesome.. love your videos thumb ups for me..

    • @NonstopEurotrip
      @NonstopEurotrip  Год назад

      ✌🏻✌🏻✌🏻

    • @YoonLeeKok
      @YoonLeeKok Год назад

      When was that? I recall taking a train from the old railway station in KL down to Tanjong Pagar Station in Singapore back in 1980. I believe that service must have been much older.

  • @kingdarkking
    @kingdarkking Год назад +10

    Great video as always 👍. You should consider traveling on the Eastman and Orient Express that runs from Thailand to Singapore via Malaysia.

    • @NonstopEurotrip
      @NonstopEurotrip  Год назад

      Is this even running any more?

    • @kingdarkking
      @kingdarkking Год назад +1

      @@NonstopEurotrip The last I checked their website, they were still operating but not sure there might be few schedule changes.

    • @naufalnoori89
      @naufalnoori89 Год назад

      that Eastman and Orient Train fare cost a bomb to purchase...never seen locals taking that train only high end tourists will ride those

    • @NonstopEurotrip
      @NonstopEurotrip  Год назад

      @@naufalnoori89 we'll see 🙈

    • @sc5252
      @sc5252 Год назад

      @@naufalnoori89 E O train from Bangkok to Singapore is very expensive, only for the rich people

  • @AngusMacKinnon-xm5ko
    @AngusMacKinnon-xm5ko Год назад

    Thanks for sharing this enjoyable trip with us. I would love to do this some day!

  • @CalamityTravels
    @CalamityTravels Год назад +5

    We opted to travel by bus instead, it was alot smoother and you can find out how in our video 😊

    • @NonstopEurotrip
      @NonstopEurotrip  Год назад +1

      Same. I've done bus train and plane and the bus was my fav too

    • @hann659
      @hann659 Год назад +1

      Bus 40 myr. Train 60-80 myr. 5 hours versus 4 hours on normal days (full ETS, no diesel train). On most of the days in a year, bus is a superior choice. Especially when the southern bus services are more organized than northern ones (most southern services do not enter small towns).

  • @SuperMohdNoor1
    @SuperMohdNoor1 Месяц назад

    A rosy trip & make sure your plan trips not on long weekends, nightmare experience.. Bro... cheers

  • @quattrobajeena8623
    @quattrobajeena8623 Год назад

    Glad to see an Asian journey in your channel. Hope you had fun in Asia.

    • @NonstopEurotrip
      @NonstopEurotrip  Год назад +1

      I'm still having fun here 😃

    • @quattrobajeena8623
      @quattrobajeena8623 Год назад

      @@NonstopEurotrip Just a question,.have you tried taking the train all the way from Malaysia to Thailand?

  • @TeguhNugroho90
    @TeguhNugroho90 Год назад +12

    I remember taking a sleeper train from JB to KL in 2014, the train is called Senandung Sutera, but now the service is suspended.
    Currently, Malaysia's ETS is the best in the region. But if you love views, come visit Indonesia and ride the train in the island of Java. Our train service has been improving a lot these past few years. Trains in Thailand, Vietnam, Laos, Myanmar, and Cambodia are also hard to resist.

    • @NonstopEurotrip
      @NonstopEurotrip  Год назад +1

      I've done them all, except Myanmar 🙏🏻😀

    • @TeguhNugroho90
      @TeguhNugroho90 Год назад +1

      @@NonstopEurotrip Cool! Would you upload the videos?

    • @NonstopEurotrip
      @NonstopEurotrip  Год назад +2

      @@TeguhNugroho90 The first Thai video was today, Laos-China Railway next week, and a Vietnamese Sleeper coming very soon!

  • @kanchanananayakkara8959
    @kanchanananayakkara8959 Год назад +5

    Interesting journey coverage! It seems that the direct over night train from Singapore to KL central has been withdrawn. Hasn't it?
    I have travelled on ETS from KL central to Butterworth and then to Penang island. The ETS runs upto 140kmph on that stretch as I have learnt. As you have mentioned on your video, Malaysia's ETS is the world's fastest higher speed train on the narrow gauge railway.

    • @NonstopEurotrip
      @NonstopEurotrip  Год назад +2

      Yes, the sleeper is no more!

    • @lzh4950
      @lzh4950 Год назад

      Thought Queensland in Australia has a narrow gauge train at 160km/h

  • @ckzf1842
    @ckzf1842 Год назад

    Very helpful vidéo , thanks !

  • @linggiman
    @linggiman Год назад +1

    I like your channel..very informative 😁

  • @user-cc4fi2zt2h
    @user-cc4fi2zt2h Год назад +2

    856 is most preferred than 903 as it is more direct

  • @hazelhatswell4268
    @hazelhatswell4268 Год назад +6

    Gosh how things have changed! In the mid 80s I took the train from Butterworth (Penang) to Singapore … epic journey 👍. When I arrived at customs control at Johor Bahru I was closely questioned (in a very polite way!) because they couldn’t understand why a European woman would choose to enter Singapore by train when (quote) “there was a perfectly good flight”. I had used that “perfectly good flight” to fly to Penang but I am so glad I chose to return by train.

    • @NonstopEurotrip
      @NonstopEurotrip  Год назад +2

      What an interesting experience ☺️

    • @ibrrich6730
      @ibrrich6730 Год назад +3

      During the 80s the concept of land border is still strong between ASEAN countries, nowadays it is getting common and the concept of border between them especially Singapore, Malaysia, Thailand, Indonesia and Brunei is slowly fading.

  • @aliciaquek69
    @aliciaquek69 Год назад

    wow good video.. I do live in Singapore and yet never travel all the way to KL by Train. Great video to watch for the details. Thanks

  • @trainsmachineryldegmtrains3509
    @trainsmachineryldegmtrains3509 Год назад +2

    Excellent video, nice train ride! Thumbs Up
    Greetings from Dublin
    Andrew

  • @1Maverick747
    @1Maverick747 Год назад +4

    The loco trains are the best experience in my opinion. They bring back a lot of memories. In those days they used to show movies on video tapes during the journey. Glad to see they still have the dining coaches. But I need to know one thing: if you can’t buy a combined ticket, how will you know you’re guaranteed a seat? Especially if tickets can only be bought on the day of travel (not sure if that applies only to the SG-JB route). I’ll be screwed if I end up in Gemas only to find out there are no seats available on the ETS. And how do you find out the timings of the trains too?

    • @NonstopEurotrip
      @NonstopEurotrip  Год назад +2

      All tickets can be bought in advance through the KTM Malaysian railways app or website, 30 days before travel. You're then allocated a seat.

    • @1Maverick747
      @1Maverick747 Год назад

      @@NonstopEurotrip cool, thanks.

  • @jeanfarmacia
    @jeanfarmacia Год назад +4

    Gotta admire the courage, I used to live on Singapore (good times) and my first trip was to KL on the same bus all the way from central Singapore to central KL. Even with all the convenience of being in the same vehicle I promised myself NEVER MORE lol Just the immigration process took a whole 3 hours.

    • @NonstopEurotrip
      @NonstopEurotrip  Год назад

      Oh wow! I've crossed that border 5 or 6 times and never been more than 15 mins!

    • @JayAnuar
      @JayAnuar Год назад

      What year did you live there? just like the admin said, the process is quite fast right now compared to old days.

    • @jeanfarmacia
      @jeanfarmacia Год назад

      @@JayAnuar I lived there from 2015 to 2022 and that infamous bus trip was in 2015. Granted it was on a holiday weekend, so crossing the border was crazy, but just a couple months later my brother also took the same route on a Wednesday and it took him 8 hours+ to reach KL. I never dared to do the same again. Next time I went to KL I just flew there and no regrets.

    • @JayAnuar
      @JayAnuar Год назад +1

      @@jeanfarmacia oh 2015. It has improved so much since i think , as what the admin experienced here.

    • @byteme9718
      @byteme9718 Год назад

      @@NonstopEurotrip Two hours is pretty normal.

  • @sonyadixon1173
    @sonyadixon1173 Год назад

    Well i did not know about this train to Kuala Lumpur from Singapore. As I have been to Singapore. Next time I will do this trip. Thanks for sharing. I like your videos, as I have just discovered you. 😀

    • @NonstopEurotrip
      @NonstopEurotrip  Год назад

      Thank you Sonya! Check out the bus options too, they're excellent 👌🏻

  • @srirama4143
    @srirama4143 Год назад

    Nice video!

  • @huangjunhui
    @huangjunhui Год назад +2

    I have just tried the Jungle Train from Kluang to Kota bharu....next time, I would like to take the train from Kulai to Hatyai. To travel Msia via train, make me have different view of seeing Malaysia. Enjoy it very much.

    • @NonstopEurotrip
      @NonstopEurotrip  Год назад

      I've done the jungle train too! What a great trip it was 😊

    • @huangjunhui
      @huangjunhui Год назад

      @@NonstopEurotrip agree, a train must try in msia. And really thanks for introduce Msia to the foreigners. Your video is great and hope you enjoy the time in my country. :)

    • @NonstopEurotrip
      @NonstopEurotrip  Год назад +1

      @@huangjunhui Loved it 😎

  • @SonnyTang
    @SonnyTang Год назад +2

    You should also try the Eastern & Oriental Express train from Singapore to Bangkok.. Very posh and luxurious(and pricey too)

  • @OtterEliteMadaniWawasan5719
    @OtterEliteMadaniWawasan5719 Год назад +2

    I'm Singaporean and I love this video 👍

  • @rinandisofyan7644
    @rinandisofyan7644 Год назад +1

    Nice trip report and detail information

  • @outolempinimi5165
    @outolempinimi5165 Год назад +2

    Yeah it’s not exactly a train trip from Singapore but from JB, is it? Although there were plans to make (reestablish) the train connection they have been buried for the foreseeable future as far as I know. Btw I believe the drink in the train you were referring to was ‘teh tarik’ (milk tea, usually very sweet). Also, I would suggest cutting the subtitles to shorter sections and keep them on a bit longer and it could a bit less stressful to skim them trough.

  • @Eurobazz
    @Eurobazz Год назад +4

    Indeed, a lot of faffing around. You've got more patience than me especially as some of the rolling stock was clunkety-clunk old tin cans. Why would they build a high speed network on metre gauge tracks? It restricts the space available inside the carriages, therefore the comfort level for passengers. Standard gauge is the norm for high speed services. It's surprising what difference the additional 435 mm make.

    • @NonstopEurotrip
      @NonstopEurotrip  Год назад +3

      Well it's not really highspeed, but all the tracks that the British build originally were narrow gauge so they're just carrying on... Same in Thailand, all metre gauge

  • @dianaleo6056
    @dianaleo6056 Год назад

    Thanks for sharing. Very informative. 👍

  • @trends2morrow107
    @trends2morrow107 Год назад

    You have hit the nail on its head....

  • @LoC28C
    @LoC28C Год назад +2

    The whole trip used to take approximately 4 - 5 hours from Kuala Lumpur to Singapore years ago. I guess the slow ride is due to the changing system and upgrading but I have to say this means poor execution of the plan to upgrade.

    • @NonstopEurotrip
      @NonstopEurotrip  Год назад +1

      Exactly. It's hopefully gonna be much better when the improvements open 😺

    • @LoC28C
      @LoC28C Год назад

      @@NonstopEurotrip I can't wait, as I am also looking forward to take a train ride from Kuala Lumpur to Chiang Mai through Bangkok.

  • @aiem
    @aiem Год назад +3

    13:50 RM15 for that kind of Nasik Lemak... Way too expensive I think.
    24:22 KTM Electrified Double-Track Project (EDTP) final stop is in Johor Bahru. From there you can take the RTS (JB to Singapore) and continue yr journey to wherever in Singapore by MRT.

    • @NonstopEurotrip
      @NonstopEurotrip  Год назад

      Ik ik 😃

    • @Hazemann
      @Hazemann Год назад +2

      That's Nasi Lemak supposedly price at RM6 only with chicken. If no chicken much cheaper. That's RM15 is wow

  • @normhanson981
    @normhanson981 Год назад +1

    Really informative, thanks, I think I’ll get the bus though from Singapore golden mile to KL Times Square . Seems easier to do in one day. Appreciated.

  • @michaeldean8021
    @michaeldean8021 Год назад

    Thank You for your posting I'm sure it will be very helpful for many. We did the trip in reverse but it was the Diesel train all the way from KL to JB Sentral. It was quite unbearbly cold throughout the very long journey due to the AC. You don't mention this so maybe things have changed, we were so happy to get to JB but I couldn't see for about 5minutes as my glasses steamed up the minute I left the carriage.

    • @NonstopEurotrip
      @NonstopEurotrip  Год назад

      I didn't notice that it was particularly cold tbh. It'll soon be possible to do the ETS the whole way 👌🏻