As of 1 October 2013, 48 vehicles were in service, formed as 3- and 5-car sets, as shown below.
3-car sets
Prototype set S1
Cars 1 and 3 are each fitted with one S-PS59 lozenge-type pantograph. The pantograph on car 1 was removed in 2010.
Set S2-S6
Cars 1 and 3 are each fitted with one S-PS59 lozenge-type pantograph. The pantograph on car 1 was removed in 2010. Car 2 is removed from formations during off-peak seasons.
5-car sets L1–L6
Half of car 8 includes Green car (first class) seating.
Streamlined end of set 8001 in original livery, 1992
Streamlined end of set 8001 in original livery, 1992
Gangwayed end of set 8201 in original livery, 1992
Gangwayed end of set 8201 in original livery, 1992
The PC-8000 series was a line of personal computers developed for the Japanese market by NEC.
The PC-8001 model was also sold in the United States and in the UK as the PC-8001A.
PC-8001
The first member of the PC-8000 series, the PC-8001 went on sale September 28, 1979 for ¥168,000. Its design combined the keyboard and the mainboard into a single unit. At a time when most micro-computers were sold as "semi-kits" requiring end user assembly, the fully assembled PC-8001 was a rarity in the market. Peripherals included a printer, a cassette tape storage unit, and a CRT interface. Although it is often believed to be the first domestically produced personal computer for the Japanese market, in reality it was preceded by the Hitachi Basic Master.
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