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The real issue is that Model Railroader has brainwashed all American modelers that "gauge" is an inappropriate descriptor, and "scale" is appropriate. That works fine as long as one is America-centric. In N, the rest of the world talks about "N Gauge" and not "N scale." In N, the gauge is more universal (after all, the "N" stands for neun, nine, etc.), but the scale is not as universal. The issue gets more notice in the U.S. in N than in other gauges or scales, since our production sources in N are more limited and we Americans then resort to buying more products from non-domestic sources.Rich K.
Brainwashed? The scale vs gauge issue had very little to do with N-scale (or gauge) but more to do with the emergence of various gauges within the scale.
Now you have me confused. As I understand, there is only one N-gauge (9mm between insides of the rail heads) and there are several N scales running on N gauge track. Even larger scale's models of narrow gauge equipment runs on N gauge track.
I wasn't disputing that Pete, we all agree that N-gauge is 9mm in any circumstance. I suppose we could all learn to change our ways and refer to what we model is 1/87 HO-gauge and (uuh, do we have a gauge name for 1/87 three foot gauge yet?) If we model 1/160 N-gauge (or any of the other flavors) and if we happen to model narrow gauge we can refer to it as 1/160 Z-gauge (I'm going to have 1/160 T-gauge as well). If we model Z we call it 1/220 Z-gauge. Yea, that's much clearer. Damn brainwashing. Curse you Model Railroader...
3 foot gauge 1/87 is commonly called HOn3. Really it should be HOn10.5, as the gauge is 10.5mm. Then there can be HOn9 instead of HOn30, Nn6.5 instead of Nn3, Nn3 instead of NnT, Zn3 instead of ZnT, and so on.Unfortunately, changing would just confuse things further.
I've mentioned this before when some 1/150 cars were starting to be advertised as N scale and now I'm seeing stuff ranging from 1/144 to 1/170. I'm not a fan of this seemingly-increasing trend but I can live with it IF the item is clearly marked as 1/144 scale, for example, and not just "N scale". Thoughts?
Roland, where did you find 1:170 scale models? I have never heard of those.
I use this to my advantage. Models that 1/170 go in the background and the one in 1/144 in the front. It really looks great when you look down a long urban street.