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3 mm scale


FieldValue
name3 mm finescale
scale3 mm to 1 ft
ratio1:101.6
<small>(3'&nbsp;gauge)</small><br/> <small>(Scotch)</small><br> <small>(standard)</small><br> <small>(Irish)</small><br>{{RailGauge16.5mmfirstmet}} (Indian)
(Brunel)
<br>{{RailGauge54infirstmet}} (Scotch gauge)
(standard)
(Irish gauge)
(Indian broad gauge)
(Brunel gauge)
websitehttp://www.3mmsociety.org.uk/

(3' gauge) (Scotch) (standard) (Irish) (Indian) (Brunel)

(Scotch gauge) (standard) (Irish gauge) (Indian broad gauge) (Brunel gauge)

3 mm scale, also known as 3 mm finescale, is a model railway scale of 3 mm : 1 ft used for British prototypes. Introduced as British TT gauge, it sits approximately halfway between British N gauge and OO gauge but is not as popular as either and there is no longer any mass manufacturer ready-to-run support. When TT gauge model railways were developed for British prototypes, in order to fit the small British prototypes, the scale was enlarged but without altering the 12mm gauge. The result, British TT gauge, is too narrow. This led to the development of gauge 3mm finescale. Thus two finescale standards were developed. By far the more common of these is 14.2 mm gauge track, which is accurate. Some modellers choose to use slightly narrower 13.5 mm track due to the necessary oversize motion of outside-cylindered steam locomotives.

British TT, also known as TT3, was pioneered by Triang Railways as ready-to-run models.

Other gauges are also used to model other prototypes (Irish broad gauge, Brunel gauge). For narrow gauges, N gauge 9 mm track represents gauge; Z gauge track represents to gauge.

The 3mm Society caters for all modellers of 3 mm scale.

References

References

  1. Nigel Brown. "Getting Started in 3mm: FAQ". The Three Millimetre Society.
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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