Open main menu
Home
Random
Recent changes
Special pages
Community portal
Preferences
About Wikipedia
Disclaimers
Incubator escapee wiki
Search
User menu
Talk
Dark mode
Contributions
Create account
Log in
Editing
O scale
Warning:
You are not logged in. Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits. If you
log in
or
create an account
, your edits will be attributed to your username, along with other benefits.
Anti-spam check. Do
not
fill this in!
{{Short description|Model railroad gauge}} {{more citations needed|date=December 2016}} {{Infobox model rail scale | name = O scale | image_filename = Modelrailway1.JPG | image_caption = Australian O scale model railway | scale = ''British'': 7 mm to 1 ft (7 mm to 304.8 mm, 1:43.5);<br>''Continental Europe'': 1:43.5 and 1:45;<br>''American'': <sup>1</sup>â<sub>4</sub> in to 1 ft (6.35 mm to 304.8 mm, 1:48) | standard = | ratio = | gauge = {{Track gauge|32mm}} | prototype_gauge = {{Track gauge|sg|allk=on}} |}} '''O scale''' (or '''O gauge''') is a [[Rail transport modelling scale standards|scale]] commonly used for [[toy train]]s and [[rail transport modelling]]. Introduced by German toy manufacturer [[MĂ€rklin]] around 1900, by the 1930s [[third rail (model railroading)|three-rail]] [[alternating current]] O gauge was the most common model railroad scale in the United States and remained so until the early 1960s. In Europe, its popularity declined before [[World War II]] due to the introduction of smaller scales. O gauge had its heyday when model railroads were considered toys, with more emphasis placed on cost, durability, and the ability to be easily handled and operated by pre-adult hands. Detail and realism were secondary concerns, at best. It still remains a popular choice for those hobbyists who enjoy running trains more than they enjoy other aspects of modeling, but developments in recent years have addressed the concerns of scale model railroaders making O scale popular among fine-scale modellers who value the detail that can be achieved. The size of O is larger than OO/HO layouts, and thus is a factor in making the decision to build an O gauge layout. Collecting vintage O gauge trains is also popular and there is a market for both reproduction and vintage models. ==History== The name for O gauge and O scale is derived from "0 [zero] gauge" or "Gauge 0" being smaller than [[Gauge 1]] and the other then-existing standards. It was created in part because manufacturers realized their best selling trains were those built in the smaller scales. In the United States, manufacturers such as the [[Ives Manufacturing Company]], [[American Flyer]], and [[Lionel Corporation]] used O gauge for their budget line, marketing either Gauge 1 or 'Wide gauge' (also known as [[Standard Gauge (toy trains)|'standard gauge']]) as their premium trains. One of the Lionel Corporation's most popular trains, the 203 Armoured Locomotive, was O gauge and ran on tracks with rails spaced 1.25 inches apart. The [[Great Depression]] wiped out demand for the expensive larger trains, and by 1932, O gauge was the standard, almost by default. Because of the emphasis on play value, the scale of preâ[[World War II]] O gauge trains varied. The MĂ€rklin specifications called for 1:43.5 scale. However, many designs were 1:48 scale or 1:64 scale. Early [[Louis Marx and Company|Marx Trains]] and entry-level trains, usually made of lithographed tin plate, were not scaled at all, made to whimsical proportions about the same length of an [[HO scale]] ("half O") piece, but about the same width and height of an O scale piece. Yet all of these designs ran on the same track, and, depending on the manufacturer(s) of the cars, could sometimes be coupled together and run as part of the same train. After World War II, manufacturers started paying more attention to scale, and post-war locomotives and rolling stock tended to be larger and more realistic than their earlier counterparts. This has been reflected in the change of name from O ''gauge'' to O ''scale'': ''gauge'' describes merely the distance between the rails, while ''scale'' describes the size ratio of a model as it relates to its real-world [[prototype]]. Since the early 1990s, O scale manufacturers have begun placing more emphasis on realism, and the scale has experienced a resurgence in popularity, with manufacturers including [[Lionel, LLC|Lionel]], [[MTH Electric Trains|MTH]], [[Atlas Model Railroad|Atlas]], and [[Williams Electric Trains|Williams by Bachmann]] making O gauge model trains at 1:48 scale. In the United Kingdom the dominant O gauge manufacturer before World War II was [[Meccano Ltd]]. who from 1920 produced a range of clockwork and electric models under the "Hornby" name. ==Standards== The differences in the various O gauge and O scale standards can be confusing. O gauge model railroad tracks typically have their rails spaced {{track gauge|1.25 in|lk=on}} apart<ref name="What is O Gauge">{{cite web |title = What is 0 Gauge? |url = http://www.gauge0guild.com/Whatis.asp |author = Ian Middleditch |publisher = Gauge '0' Guild |access-date = 2010-04-11 |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20100111220851/http://www.gauge0guild.com/whatis.asp |archive-date = 2010-01-11 }}</ref> with the United States [[National Model Railroad Association|National Model Railroad Association (NMRA)]] standard allowing spacings between 31.75 mm and 32.64 mm.<ref name="NMRA S-1.2 2009.07">{{cite web |url = http://www.nmra.org/standards/sandrp/pdf/S-1.2%202009.07.pdf |title = NMRA STANDARDS S-1.2 Standards for Scale Models |date = July 2009 |access-date = 2010-04-11 |publisher = [[National Model Railroad Association]] |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20100706185702/http://www.nmra.org/standards/sandrp/pdf/S-1.2%202009.07.pdf |archive-date = 2010-07-06 }}</ref> ===Scale and gauge=== [[Scale (ratio)|Scale]] refers to the size of the model relative to the actual full-sized object being represented, while [[Rail gauge|gauge]] is the width of the model track. Most commercially produced model track is a compromise between appearance and a trouble-free running surface. ====Scale==== Scale is the ratio of a model dimension to the real life dimension. O Scale in the UK is commonly 1:43.5 or 7 mm to the foot. In continental Europe it is commonly 1:45. 1:43.5 is also used, particularly in France.<ref name="NEM-010">{{cite web|url=http://www.morop.org/fr/normes/nem010_f.pdf|title=Normes EuropĂ©ennes de ModĂ©lisme: Rapports de rĂ©duction, Ă©chelles, Ă©cartements|year=2004|publisher=Union EuropĂ©enne des ModĂ©listes Ferroviaires et des Amis des Chemins de Fer|language=FR|access-date=2010-04-11}}</ref> In the USA, 1:48 is common.<ref name="NMRA S-1.2 2009.07"/> The [[National Model Railroad Association|NMRA]] and the [[MOROP]] maintain detailed standards for a variety of scales to help model makers create interoperable models.<ref name="NEM-010"/><ref name="NMRA Intro">{{cite web |url = http://www.nmra.org/standards/standards.html |title = Standards & Recommended Practices - Introduction |date = 2008-02-17 |author = T.J. Klevar |access-date = 2010-04-11 |publisher = [[National Model Railroad Association]] |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20100403082408/http://www.nmra.org/standards/standards.html |archive-date = 2010-04-03 }}</ref> ====Gauge==== ''Gauge'' refers to the distance between the inside edges of the load-bearing rails. Various sizes of [[track gauge]] exist around the world and the normal O gauge track represents the [[Standard gauge]] of {{Track gauge|1435 mm}}. "O gauge" refers to tracks that are nominal {{Track gauge|32mm}} according to older standards of NMRA, current standards of BRMSB and NEM. {{Track gauge|1.25 in}} apart current standards of NMRA.<ref name="What is O Gauge"/> When used as a [[narrow-gauge]] track, O gauge allows scales such as 1:32 representing {{Track gauge|1000 mm}} gauge track. 1:20 representing {{Track gauge|600 mm}} [[narrow-gauge railway]]s. Regional model manufacturers design their O-scale rolling stock with minor regional scale differencesâmanufacturers support their rolling stock with track made to the same regional scales, so there is no universal width for O-gauge model track.{{Citation needed|date=April 2010}} Models could represent the real-world standard gauge track spacing of {{Track gauge|1435 mm|disp=1}} by choosing various spacings such as {{Track gauge|30 mm}} at 1:48 scale, {{Track gauge|1.25 in}} at 1:45.2 scale, {{Track gauge|32 mm}} at 1:44.8 scale, {{Track gauge|32.96 mm}} at 7 mm:1 ft scale, and {{Track gauge|33 mm}} at 1:43.5 scale. Model makers choose their scale based on many considerations including the existing marketplace, aesthetic concerns and compatibility with existing models. ====Wide- or narrow-gauge track==== [[File:Spur 0e Zahnradbahn im Modelleisenbahnclub Basel mit He 2 2 und Vorstellwagen 2021.jpg|thumb|Probably the oldest known 0e gauge vehicles in the MCB from 1947. WAB rack railway train, 2021]] Some O-scale modelers choose to model prototypes at other than standard gauge and follow wide gauge (also known as [[broad-gauge]]) or [[narrow-gauge]] railroads. There is no standard for wide- or narrow-gauge model track, and modelers wishing to portray such railway track either build their own, or more commonly accept the shortcomings of appropriately wider or narrower gauge model track. {{Track gauge|16.5mm}}, {{Track gauge|12mm}} and {{Track gauge|9mm}} are the more popular track widths used by indoor enthusiasts modeling narrow gauge. Differences in regional scales give different prototype gauges to these different model track widths. For example, using specially manufactured {{Track gauge|16.5mm}} gauge track, scaled at 7 mm to the foot (with appropriately spaced, larger [[Railroad tie|sleepers]], etc.) underneath: # UK O scale rolling stock (1:43.5), it becomes a narrow-gauge track of {{Track gauge|2ft4in}}, and is referred to as "[[On30 gauge|O 16.5]]". Modelers portray gauges between {{Track gauge|2ft}} and {{Track gauge|3ft}}. # European O scale rolling stock (1:45 or 1:43.5 in France), it becomes a narrow-gauge track of {{Track gauge|750mm}}, and is referred to as "[[Oe gauge|Oe]]" portraying a {{Track gauge|750mm|disp=1}}, {{Track gauge|760mm|disp=1}} and {{Track gauge|800mm|disp=1}} prototype. Modelers portray gauges between 650 mm and 800 mm prototype. # United States O scale rolling stock (1:48), it becomes a narrow-gauge track of {{Track gauge|2ft6in}}, and is referred to as "[[On30 gauge|On 2œ]]" (or On30, as in 30 inches). ===Om gauge=== [[File:FAMA-Alpenbahn Lang Spur 0m 0-22,5 RhB Ge 6 6 704 Davos rot.jpg|thumb|Om gauge (O-22.5 gauge), model of the RhB Ge 6/6 II 704 in 1:45 scale from parts of the former FAMA-Alpenbahn and Lang Modellbau, 2019]] [[File:Modelleisenbahn Diorama nach Vorbild der Sernftalbahn mit SeTB BCFe 2 2 4 Spur 0m Spur 0-22,2 2021.jpg |thumb|Om gauge (O-22.2 gauge), Diorama based on the SeTB with a selfmade motor coach of the type BCFe 2/2 4, 2021]] The Om gauge (O-22.5 gauge) includes the actual narrow-gauges from 850 to 1250 mm and with it the [[metre-gauge railway|metric gauge]]. This applies to both 1:43.4 and 1:45 scale model trains. Metric model railroaders generally use the 0m scale with a gauge of 22.5 mm. The starting point is the NEM standards concerning 0m gauge that were created at the end of the 1950s. ===O-27 gauge=== ''O-27 gauge'' is variant whose origins are slightly unclear. Some historians attribute its creation to [[A. C. Gilbert Company]]'s [[American Flyer]], but [[Ives Manufacturing Company]] used O-27 track in its entry-level sets at least a decade before Gilbert bought Flyer. The modern standard for O-27, however, was formalized after 1938 by Gilbert, who scaled the locomotives and rolling stock to [[1:64 scale]]. After World War II, this practice was continued by [[Louis Marx and Company]], who used it throughout its product line, and [[Lionel, LLC|Lionel]], who used it for its entry-level trains. O-27 track is spaced at the same width as regular O gauge track, but is slightly shorter in height and has thinner rails than traditional O gauge track. A shim underneath the O-27 track enables the use of O and O-27 track together. The O-27 name comes from the size of the track's curves. A circle made of eight pieces of standard 45-degree curved O gauge track will have a {{convert|31|in|mm|sigfig=3}} diameter. A circle made of 8 pieces of 45-degree curved O-27 track is smaller, with a {{convert|27|in|mm|sigfig=3}} diameter. Full-sized O cars sometimes have difficulty negotiating the tighter curves of an O-27 layout. Although the smaller, tin lithographed cars by American Flyer, Marx, and others predate the formal O-27 standard, they are also often called O-27, because they also operate flawlessly on O-27 track. Marx may have dedicated its entire line to O-27, but only the [[Lionel Corporation]] remains to produce O-27 track and trains. Its tubular rail is a standard of the tinplate era. ===Super-O gauge=== "Super-O gauge" is a variant whose origin stems from Lionel's desire to create a more realistic looking track and improve sagging sales in the late 1950s.{{Citation needed|date=March 2022}} ===Exact scale standards=== Dissatisfaction with these standards led to a more accurate standard for wheels and track called ''Proto:48'' This duplicates to exact scale the [[Association of American Railroads|AAR]] track and [[wheel]] standards.<ref>{{cite web |title=The History of Proto48 |url=http://www.proto48.org/p48_information.htm |work=Proto48 Modeler |access-date=22 September 2013}}</ref> In the United Kingdom a similar [[ScaleSeven]] system exists. The track gauge normally used for O of 32 mm or the near-approximation {{frac|1|1|4}} inch is for [[Standard gauge]] ({{Track gauge|1435mm}}) approximately equivalent to {{Track gauge|5ft}} at 1:48 scale, {{Track gauge|4ft8.5in}} at 1:45 and {{Track gauge|4ft6.5in}} at 1:43.5.<ref name=Hollingsworth>{{cite book |last=Hollingsworth |first=Brian |title=Model Railroads|year=1981 |publisher=Bison Books |location=London, UK |isbn=0-60034944-6}}</ref> Possibly because of the large size of American railroad systems, accurate scale modeling in [[standard gauge]] O gauge is rare in the United States, though [[narrow-gauge]] modeling is much more common. Four common narrow-gauge standards exist, and the differences among ''On3,'' ''On2,'' ''On30,'' and ''On18'' are frequent sources of confusion. On3 is exact-scale 1:48 modeling of {{Track gauge|3ft}} gauge prototypes, while [[On30]] is [[1:48]] modeling of {{Track gauge|2ft6in}} gauge prototypes, On2 is 1:48 modeling of {{Track gauge|2ft}} gauge prototypes, and On18 is 1:48 modeling of {{Track gauge|18in}} gauge prototypes. On30 is also sometimes called On2œ. Because On30's gauge closely matches that of HO track, On30 equipment typically runs on standard HO scale track. While many On30 modelers [[Scratch building|scratchbuild]] their equipment, commercial offerings in On30 are fairly common and sometimes very inexpensive, with [[Bachmann Industries]] being the most commonly found manufacturer. Hobbyists who choose to model in any of these O gauge standards nevertheless end up building most, if not all, of their equipment either from kits or from scratch. ===Power supply=== Models that are either built to [[1:43 scale]], 7 mm:1 foot (1:43.5), 1:45 scale, or [[1:48 scale]] can run on realistic-looking two-rail track using [[direct current]] (Commonly known as ''2-Rail O''), or on a center [[third rail (model railroading)|third power rail]] or a center stud supply system. If modeling such a system, an external third rail or overhead supply may be employed. While two-rail O has traditionally been more popular in Europe, and [[alternating current]] powered three-rail more popular in the United States, two-rail O is currently experiencing a resurgence in popularity in the United States, due to increased availability of ready-to-run models from several manufacturers. The recent development of Digital Command Control (DCC) power systems with built in sound have also increased the popularity of two rail O scale models. ===Die-cast metal models compatible with O scale=== Many manufacturers produce [[die-cast models]] of trucks, cars, buses, construction equipment and other vehicles in scales compatible with or similar to O scale model trains. These are available in [[1:43 scale]], [[1:48 scale]] and [[1:50 scale]]. Manufacturers include [[Conrad (company)|Conrad]], NZG, [[Corgi Toys|Corgi]], [[TWH Collectibles]]. [[Ertl Company|Ertl]], and many others. These are popular with collectors and easy to find. ==Geographical area== {{comparison_of_model_railway_scales.svg}} ===Continental Europe=== 0 scale is one of the scales defined by the [[Normen EuropĂ€ischer Modellbahnen|NEM]] as 1:43,5 and 1:45 scale. However, for historical reasons they use the number "zero" rather than the letter as the name for the scale. A situation similar to that in Britain exists in continental Europe, although the market revolves less around kits and more around expensive hand-built metal models for the deep-pocketed collector.{{cn|date=February 2024}} Additionally, Czech Republicâbased Electric Train Systems started manufacturing and selling lithographed tin 1:45 scale trains in 1991, citing O gauge's advantages over smaller sizes for non-permanent floor layouts and outdoor layouts. The Spanish company [[Paya (Spanish company)|Paya]] produces a smaller line of tinplate trains, based on designs dating back to 1906. In Germany a narrow-gauge train set is produced by [[Fleischmann (model railroads)|Fleischmann]], running on {{Track gauge|16.5mm}} track, this scale is called "0e" ({{Track gauge|750mm}} prototype). The trains are marketed as children's toy trains (Magic Train), but are accurately built after Austrian prototypes and increased the interest in building narrow-gauge layouts in Germany and Austria significantly. Since 2006 there are again some reasonably priced O-scale plastic models available, manufactured by DCC developer Lenz. In the 1970s both Italian branches of Rivarossi and Lima produced large quantities of "0" models, mainly Italian and German trains, later on coaches and wagons from Switzerland. In the late 1970s hand made models of the Orient Express could be found in several German hobby stores, along with other highly detailed accessories. Special brands for high procession were Lemaco, Fulgurex, Euro Train, Markscheffel & Lennartz, making models in small quantities. ===Former Soviet Union=== Between 1951 and 1969, a limited number of O gauge train sets were manufactured in the [[Soviet Union]]. Utilizing the same track and [[voltage]] as their U.S. counterparts, the colorful locomotives and cars resembled pre-[[World War II]] designs from U.S. manufacturers Lionel and American Flyer and the couplers were nearly identical to those of pre-war American Flyer. Some differences in U.S. and Soviet railroading were evident from comparing the Soviet sets with U.S. sets, particularly in the design of the boxcar, which looked like an American Flyer boxcar with windows added, reflecting the Soviets' use of box cars to haul livestock, as well as merchandise. Much like their U.S. counterparts, Soviet O gauge trains were toys, rather than precision-scaled models. ===United Kingdom=== {{Infobox model rail scale | name = British O gauge | image_filename = O_gauge_at_Kew.jpg | image_caption = British outline O gauge model railway at [[Kew]] [[Pumping Station]] | scale = 7 mm to {{cvt|1|ft|mm|1}} | ratio = 1:43.5 | gauge = 32 mm | prototype_gauge = [[Standard gauge]] }} In the United Kingdom, O gauge equipment is produced at a scale of 1:43.5, which is 7 mm to the foot (using the common British practice of modelling in metric prototypes originally produced using Imperial measurements). It is often called ''7 mm scale'' for this reason. Although toy trains were historically produced to this scale, O gauge's popularity across the whole of Europe reduced after World War II, and the standard is rarer than in the United States. Modelling in O gauge almost died out in Britain but enjoyed a resurgence in the 1990s as modellers developed a new appreciation for the level of accurate detailing possible in this scale. Some ready to run models are produced in this scale but most are available only as kits for assembly by the modeller or a professional model-builder. O gauge is considered an expensive scale to model in although the necessarily smaller scope of a larger-scaled layout mitigates this to some extent. The two dominant British manufacturers, [[Bassett-Lowke]] and [[Hornby Railways|Hornby]], ceased production of O gauge trains in 1965 and 1969, respectively. However, [[ACE Trains]] and for a while a revived Bassett-Lowke are once again producing tinplate O gauge sets, many of them reproductions of classic Hornby and Bassett-Lowke designs, and [[Heljan]] also recently joined the market producing O gauge Diesel locomotives. A true-to-prototype version of British 7 mm O gauge exists, called [[ScaleSeven]] (S7) which uses 33 mm gauge to represent British [[standard gauge]] in a scale of 1:43.5. The British 1:43.5 rail scale gave birth to series of [[Die Cast cars|die cast cars]] and model commercial vehicles of the same scale which gradually grew in popularity and spread to France, the rest of Europe and North America at the same time that the rail models were becoming less popular. 7 mm scale is also popular for modelling [[narrow-gauge railways]], a section of the hobby supported by the [[7mm Narrow Gauge Association]]. {{clear}} ===United States=== {{Infobox model rail scale | name = US O gauge | image_filename = us_o_gauge.jpg | image_caption = Typical US O-Scale locomotive | widthpx = 300px | scale = {{cvt|1/4|in|mm|2}} to {{cvt|1|ft|mm|1}} | ratio = 1:48 | standard = [[National Model Railroad Association|NMRA]] | gauge = 32 mm | prototype_gauge = [[Standard gauge]] }} In the United States, '''O gauge''' is defined as 1:48 (0.25 inches to the foot, "quarter inch scale" - 1/4 inch equals one foot). This is also a common [[dollhouse]] scale, giving more options for buildings, figures, and accessories. Many O gauge layouts are also accessorized with 1:43.5 scale [[model car]]s. While 1:48 is a very convenient scale for modeling using the Imperial system (a quarter-inch equals one scale foot), the discrepancy between O gauge in the United States and O gauge in Europe is attributed to Lionel misreading the original MĂ€rklin specifications. Although [[Lionel Corporation|Lionel]] is the most enduring brand of O gauge trains, a variety of manufacturers made trains in this scale. Prior to [[World War I]], the majority of toy trains sold in the United States were German imports made by MĂ€rklin, [[Bing (company)|Bing]], [[Dorfan|Fandor]], and other companies. World War I brought a halt to these German imports, and protective [[tariff]]s after the war made it difficult for them to compete. In between the two world wars, shorter-lived companies such as [[Dorfan]], [[Hafner Manufacturing Company|Hafner]], Ives, and Joy Line competed with Lionel, [[Louis Marx and Company]], American Flyer and [[Meccano|Hornby]]. Many of these pre-war trains operated by clockwork or battery power and were made of lithographed tin. The sizes of the cars varied widely, as the standard for O gauge was largely ignored. Dorfan went out of business in 1934, while Ives was bought by Lionel, and Hafner and Joy Line were bought by Marx. Hornby withdrew from the U.S. market in 1930 after selling its U.S. factory to the [[A. C. Gilbert Company]]. As early as 1938, the survivors Lionel, Marx, and American Flyer faced competition from Sakai, a Tokyo-based Japanese toy company who sold trains priced at the low end of the market. The product designs most closely resembled Lionel, but with MĂ€rklin-like couplers and detail parts that appeared to be copied from Ives. Seki, another Japanese company, was an entirely different and independent company. Between 1946 and 1976, the primary U.S. manufacturers of O gauge trains were Lionel and Marx, with American Flyer switching to the more-realistic [[S scale]] and the rest of the companies out of business. Toy maker [[Unique Art]] produced a line of inexpensive O gauge trains from 1949 to 1951, but found itself unable to compete with Marx. Marx continued to make clockwork and battery-powered trains and lithographed cars into the 1970s, along with more realistic offerings that were sometimes difficult to distinguish from Lionel. Sakai re-entered the U.S. market after World War II, selling trains that were often nearly identical to Marx designs and sometimes undercutting Marx's prices, from 1946 to 1969. A company called American Model Toys brought out a line of realistic, detailed cars beginning in 1948. In 1953 it released a budget line. It ran into financial difficulty, reorganized under the name Auburn Model Trains, and ended up selling its line to [[Nashville, Tennessee]]âbased Kusan, a plastics company who continued its production until 1961. The tooling was then sold to a small company run by Andrew Kriswalus in [[Endicott, New York]], who operated as Kris Model Trains, or KMT. Kriswalus only produced the box, stock, and refrigerator cars from the Kusan dies, and on some of these cars he mounted die-cast trucks from the Kusan tooling. After Kriswalus' death, the tooling was sold to [[K-Line]] and [[Williams Electric Trains]], who continued to use it to produce parts of their budget lines. From O gauge's beginnings up until the mid-1970s, the various manufacturers' trackside accessories would interoperate with one another, but the train cars themselves used couplers of differing designs, often making it difficult or impossible to use different manufacturers' cars together. The post-War consolidation did little to improve matters: Marx used three different standards, depending on the product line, and Lionel used two, so frequently the companies' own entry-level products were incompatible with their high-end products, let alone with the competition. Hobbyists who wanted differing standards to interoperate had to resort to replacing couplers. After Marx went out of business in 1978, [[K-Line]] bought much of Marx's tooling and entered the marketplace. K-Line's early offerings changed little from the old Marx designs, other than a new brand name and a Lionel-compatible coupler, making K-Line's offerings completely interoperable with Lionel. As O gauge regained popularity in the 1990s it also started to regain manufacturers, and as of late 2003, no fewer than six companies market O gauge locomotives and/or cars, all theoretically interoperable with one another. Lionel equipment retains a large collector following. Equipment from shorter-lived manufacturers prior to World War II is also highly sought after, while American Flyer and Marx are less so. Post-War Marx is gaining in popularity after years of being derided by serious collectors. There is little collector interest in Sakai today, possibly because of difficulty identifying the equipment and because the brand is much less widely known than its U.S. counterparts. The biggest makers of American O scale trains today include [[Lionel, LLC|Lionel]], [[MTH Electric Trains|MTH]], [[Atlas Model Railroad|Atlas]], and [[Williams Electric Trains|Williams by Bachmann]]. ==In popular culture== This scale and gauge was used to model the [[Skarloey Railway]] locomotives and rolling stock for [[Thomas & Friends (series 4)|series 4]] of ''[[Thomas & Friends]]''. However, the construction of the engines resulted in difficulties during filming. [[Thomas & Friends (series 5)|Series 5]] introduced new models of the engines and rolling stock, which were bigger than the [[gauge 1]] standard gauge engines and stock but still ran on O gauge track. They were used up until [[Thomas & Friends (series 12)|series 12]] before the move to CGI animation. The small scale models occasionally still appeared, usually when interacting with gauge 1 standard gauge engines in series 5, [[Thomas & Friends (series 7)|7]] (stock footage), [[Thomas & Friends (series 9)|9]] and [[Thomas & Friends (series 10)|10]] and ''Calling All Engines!''. ==See also== * [[3 ft gauge rail modelling]] â representing {{Track gauge|3ft}} narrow gauge * [[On2 gauge]] â representing {{Track gauge|2ft}} narrow gauge * [[On30 gauge]] â narrow gauge modeling in O Scale using H0 scale track * [[OO gauge]] * [[HO gauge]] * [[Rail transport modelling scales]] * [[SE scale]] ==References== {{reflist|30em}} ==External links== {{Commons category|0 scale|O scale}} *[http://www.gauge0guild.com/ The Gauge 0 Guild, the main British society] *[http://www.lionel.com/ForTheHobbyist/Guides/AboutGuage.cfm "About Gauge" guide] from Lionel discussing O versus O27 gauge *[http://www.oscalemag.com/ O Scale Trains] *[http://www.tcaetrain.org/articles/operating/supero/index.html Lionel Super-O Track An Historical Perspective] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120717035938/http://www.tcaetrain.org/articles/operating/supero/index.html|date=2012-07-17}} *[https://web.archive.org/web/20150622023814/http://www.jlmtrains.com/super_o_track.htm Lionel Super "O" Track] {{Scale models}} {{DEFAULTSORT:O Scale}} [[Category:Model railroad scales]] [[Category:Scale model scales]]
Edit summary
(Briefly describe your changes)
By publishing changes, you agree to the
Terms of Use
, and you irrevocably agree to release your contribution under the
CC BY-SA 4.0 License
and the
GFDL
. You agree that a hyperlink or URL is sufficient attribution under the Creative Commons license.
Cancel
Editing help
(opens in new window)
Pages transcluded onto the current version of this page
(
help
)
:
Template:Citation needed
(
edit
)
Template:Cite book
(
edit
)
Template:Cite web
(
edit
)
Template:Clear
(
edit
)
Template:Cn
(
edit
)
Template:Commons category
(
edit
)
Template:Comparison of model railway scales.svg
(
edit
)
Template:Convert
(
edit
)
Template:Frac
(
edit
)
Template:Infobox model rail scale
(
edit
)
Template:More citations needed
(
edit
)
Template:Reflist
(
edit
)
Template:Scale models
(
edit
)
Template:Short description
(
edit
)
Template:Track gauge
(
edit
)
Template:Webarchive
(
edit
)