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| | 1 gauge - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | No 1 gauge was standardised, according to Model Railways and Locomotive magazine of August 1909 at 1 3/4" or 44 3/4 mm. |
 | | By comparison, 1 gauge's 1:32 scale makes it nearly three times the dimensions of modern HO scale, the most popular size of today. |
 | | Today, Märklin, in Germany, produces two different lines of 1 gauge equipment, one cheaper, made of tin plate metal, and less detailed than their premier line, which is super-detailed and expensive. |
| en.wikipedia.org /wiki/1_gauge (490 words) |
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