- broad-
gauge railway is a
railway with a
track gauge (the
distance between the rails)
broader than the 1,435 mm (4 ft 8+1⁄2 in) used by standard-
gauge railways...
-
Standard Gauge, also
known as
wide gauge, was an
early model railway and toy
train rail
gauge,
introduced in the
United States in 1906 by
Lionel Corporation...
-
making it
larger than 0
gauge but
slightly smaller than
wide gauge,
which came to be the
dominant U.S.
standard during the 1920s.
Gauge one was standardised...
- 5 ft 6 in (1,676 mm), also
known as the
Indian gauge is a
broad track gauge, used in India, ****stan,
western Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Argentina, Chile,...
- conversion/are
converted to the nation-
wide standard 5 ft 6 in (1,676 mm)
gauge,
under Project Unigauge. As of 2024, narrow-
gauge locomotives are only operating...
-
Lionel Corporation used O
gauge for
their budget line,
marketing either Gauge 1 or '
Wide gauge' (also
known as 'standard
gauge') as
their premium trains...
-
compatible with the
track gauge.
Since many
different track gauges exist worldwide,
gauge differences often present a
barrier to
wider operation on railway...
- A
loading gauge is a
diagram or
physical structure that
defines the
maximum height and
width dimensions in
railway vehicles and
their loads.
Their purpose...
-
Jersey from 1924 to 1934.
Their production lines specialized in O
gauge and
Wide gauge toy trains.
Bringing years of
previous toy
making experience, Milton...
-
between opposite limbs:
narrow gauge,
medium gauge, and
wide gauge. The
gauge of the
trackway can help
determine how
wide-set the
limbs of
various sauropods...