The Home of Articulated Ugliness
cabbage wrote:Dear on30Francisco..Where HAVE you been looking?!?!?!?! 16mm scale is the de Facto scratch builders scale(!) Yes the ready built locos are an arm and a leg -but have a look around at the kits and suppliers that are available for 16mm. I have only one 16mm loco that I have not built, and I assembled that from a kit.Hit the home page icon on either mine or Matts entry and have a tour around the 16mm web ring.16mm is a scale and ethos where a finely crafted steam locomotive has equal standing with a meccano clockwork powered collection of lollipop sticks pulling a wagon made from a tobacco tin using a paper clip.My son is the very proud owner of a "Toby" and "Percy" made to run on my SM32 track -they cost me maybe £5 each to build. He now wants a "Duck" and a "Mavis" building, these are somewhat more difficult to build and I have budgeted £8 each for them...There are NO RULES whan it comes to 16mm scale, if you like it, you build it -out of whatever junk and scrap you can find. If you examne the collection of locos found on my web page then I suppose I should explain something...I chose the locos because no-one else had ever contemplated making them, this to my mind was very sad. They are ugly, they are articulated and they were built for work -not to be be admired!regardsralph
Thank you for the encouragement. I think I'll begin by putting modified trucks on some small pieces of logging rolling stock I've already built for the 45mm gauge. I have to get up the nerve to regauge a cheap locomotive. I know Sierra Valley Enterprises sells their Large Scale wheelsets gauged to O scale and Aristo-Craft's Classic trucks, besides being inexpensive, can easily be regauged to accept these wheelsets.
Over 'this' side of the pond (the Pacific one) old light railways used a gauge of 610mm or larger, which is two foot and upwards. My railway (http://www.freewebs.com/mjhfoster/) models the two foot gauge in 1/19th scale so I use Pico SM32 (Sixteen Millimetre=one foot 32mm gauge track) 32mm gauge track.
That leaves me free to scrounge old O' gauge track, which is 32mm too.
I recently bought a live steam loco from Regner in Germany direct. They have a US supplier too. I paid 479 Euros ($703) plus 95 Euros ($139) postage to Japan. To me this is a very reasonable price for a live steam geared loco that has water glass, pressure gauge, safety valve, gas tank, water top-up valve, lubricator all as standard. This loco is re-gaugeable from 45mm to 30mm (re-gaugeing tool supplied)
What do you think?
Regards,
See I knew someone would come up with it.
Thanks Ralph.
There's a web site to you might want to look at http://www.16mm.org.uk/
Hope that helps David.
Jack
thanks, Jack,
I guess what confused me is that 16mm and "feet" are in the proportion (mixing measurements); probably b/c 16mm doesn't work out well to inches I'm guessing
the 16mm represents 1 foot it's 1:19. Maybe someone from the other side of the pond will chime in about what track is used and waht it represents.
I don't model in this scale but I'm wondering if someone can explain the gauge used and the prototype modeled.
I'm guessing 16mm uses O gauge track (32mm).
I'm also guessing that it represents 2 feet gauge.
Last guess is that 16mm represents 16mm to the centimeter (16mm:1c). Or, does 16mm represent 1 foot?
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