X 2000 in China in 2006 cab car 110986 at the
Swedish Railway Museum in September 2012 at Ticonderoga station, New York. The manufacturer of the X 2000 had tried to sell the train to countries other than Sweden, but with little success. In connection with the sales attempts the train was tested and demonstrated in some countries. Norway, Finland, Germany, Austria, France, China, Australia, Portugal and the US were mentioned as candidates. An X 2000 toured the United States in 1992–1993 on lease to
Amtrak. It was tested by Amtrak from October 1992 until January 1993. It was used in revenue service on the
Northeast Corridor between
New Haven, CT and
Washington DC, via
New York City, for about five months, from February until May and from August until September 1993. From May until July it was taken on a national tour around the 48 continental states for demonstration stops at significant stations. It also toured parts of Canada. In 1995, three X 2000 cars (SJ2819, SJ2620 and SJ2520) were hired by Australian operator
CountryLink for evaluation purposes, being one driving trailer, one bistro car and one first class car. The trains were towed in a
push/pull mode by modified
XPT power cars XP2000 and XP2009. After conducting a statewide tour of
New South Wales in March 1995, they were used on
Sydney to
Canberra services from April to June 1995. The X2 was also tested in Norway and Germany. There were competitors which had lower prices, including
Pendolino and
ICE T. The
Guangshen Railway Company in China leased and later purchased outright an X 2000 train which it named
Xinshisu (New Speed). The train served as
Guangzhou–Kowloon through train from 1998 until 2007 when it was replaced by locomotive hauled coaches. The train was initially supposed to have been given the number 2044, but due to the fact that
the number "4" sounds similar to the word for "death" in the Chinese language, it was renumbered as 2088, of which
the number "8" symbolises luck in Chinese culture. It was delivered to
Sichuan Province in August 2007. Due to the
2008 Sichuan earthquake,
Chengdu Railway Bureau needed to rebuild the railway networks in Sichuan Province. Also, the authority could not carry the maintenance costs of the train. It was therefore returned to the Guangshen Railway Company in late December 2008. In 2012 the train was purchased by SJ and repatriated back to Sweden. The train had some serious damage and deferred maintenance. The cab car (110986 CUB2XFK) has been cosmetically restored and repainted, losing its Chinese livery, and will be displayed at the
Swedish Railway Museum when it reopens. The five intermediate trailers were refurbished and re-entered service in 2020, with the power car (2088 CX2) following in September 2025 under its new designation X2EK. This new designation indicates the installation of ETCS equipment and the ability to run in Denmark, though approval for that is still pending. ==Technical==