From: Bif Smith <bif@b...>
Date: Sat, 27 Jan 2001 12:04:06 -0000
Subject: RE:scales again
As a railway modeler, I might be able to help here. Allan Goodall wrote > One set is 1/72, the other is 1/76. Neither is what I've seen as the Right, this sounds like british model railway scale, called OO gauge (double o), which is 1/76 scale, but still runs on HO (half O gauge) track, which is 1/87 scale. If your interested, railway mesurments are usually in mm/ft scale. O gauge, 7 mm/1ft, forgot the scale, the first model railway scale HO gauge (half O), 3.5mm/1ft, 1/87 scale, designed to be a home gauge to bring model railways into the home OO gauge (british), 4mm/1ft, 1/76 scale, introduced due to the fact UK trains (in real life) are smaller than almost everybody else`s trains (disadvantage due to being first), the bodies had to be larger to fit the motors avalible at the time, but still ran on ho track (so the track is too small for a true scale) N gauge, 2mm/ft, this is more difficult due to the fact that the scales are different depending on where you are. after this you decend into the really small scales like Z scale (sneeze and you lose these). I know this is totally off topic, but I thought you might be interested. Also, when you state the figure is 10mm, make sure that everyone knows that it`s 10mm hight, because there is a scale called gauge 1, that is 10mm/1ft scale, so if you went into a model railway shop and asked for 10mm, you might get something the total wrong size.