You can use G scale indoors but if you don't have a lot of room, you will be forced to use smaller curves, usually in the four to five foot diameter range, thus limiting the types of locomotives and rolling stock you could use.
Someone once told me that the average human wingspan (arms stretched out to your sides) is equivalent to your height. So if you're six feet tall, you can approximate what a six foot diameter curve would look like by spinning where you think you might need curves.
You can also take an 8' 2x4 and do the same to see if it would clear obstructions. An eight foot diameter curve will accomodate just about anything in G scale, locomotive wise.
Mark
Age is only a state of mind, keep the mind active and enjoy life
Tom Trigg
Looks to me like you did indeed find the right place for ideas and information! Browse the trains.com forums and see what you like. Take a trip to you local library and borrow a few books on model railroading. Maybe purchase a small starter set and get something running to fuel your enthusiasm.
So many choices, so little time............................................
The Dixie D Short Line "Lux Lucet In Tenebris Nihil Igitur Mors Est Ad Nos 2001"
I was sitting in a doctors office wating room and found the June 2006 issue of Model Railroader. I later found out I had found a new hobby. Now, I'm new to the whole model train shabang so if someone could give me some ideas on where to start or some ideas on good trains to I could really use it.
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