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I can tell I am getting older, I remember when N was not a scale, but a "gauge". The first N track I ever saw was in a Chicago hobby shop, and had been imported to run "HOn2 1/2" (also known as HOn30). The first N trains I saw a year or so later were again, N gauge, and a mix of Euro equipment of various scales and if you were not careful, you would end up with a 1/148 locomotive pulling 1/160 cars. Not long after that we began to see Aurora Postage Stamp sets, and a friend of mine from 7th grade became one of the world's first N scalers.And now.....Well, it's Saturday, and out there, at some museum, there is a crew of guys working on restoring a steam locomotive, using a photo of Max's N scale model as a reference.N scale has come a lonngggggg way in 50 years.
Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious!!That is amazingly outstanding Max! If you told me that this photo was of an N scale model I would never believe you! Honest! You are an epitome of a master model railroader!
Well folks, today is the day.There will be a final installment with the last few"step-by-steps" on this project in the main project thread in a few more days.But for now, I just need to sit quietly and think about what happened last nightwhen I attached the bell rope and checked the final item off the work list.
Runner scale?!As I understand, back in the '60s and even '70s, N scale was considered nothing more than a novelty toy train to play with. While there were few rebels who utilized it for realistic operation on fairly large layouts (individuals such as the Reid Bros., or Dick Taylor, or clubs such as the Belmont Shore Club and of course NTRAK), but most model railroaders at that time turned their noses up at N scale.