is the end result any good
When I laid out my garden line some 20 years ago, I used Tenmille G-Scale ** track and points. As a sizeable order (100 yards plus 6 points), I went to the factory to pick it up. Most of my line continues to be Tenmille.
As I made alterations (new junction, addition of a passing loop, etc.), I tended to buy LGB track (available locally) and used the "crimped LGB joiner" method where the two different rail profiles met. The Tenmille track that was released all got reused in storage sidings. As those "crimped joiners" became unreliable I have replaced them with standard track clamps (Hillman, designed for LGB rail) letting in a short length of copper wire, stripped from mains cable, to give a tight fit on the narrower Tenmille rail. That has proved to be reliable.
The only shortcoming I have encountered with Tenmille equipment is that their points don't have the rigidity of LGB points. They are fine if laid on a perfectly flat surface but are likely to cause problems if the ground is uneven, or becomes uneven with the movement of the earth in different weather conditions (I'm on clay!).
I have no plans to extend my current line, but a house-move may be "in the offing" so I have been acquiring second-hand Tenmille G-Scale track "just in case". I never recommend anything to anyone (for fear of your experience and expectations being different from mine), but some might consider that these continuing purchases as a "recommendation" for Tenmille track.
This is my experience. As others have said, it's an opinion that's worth exactly what you paid for it!
All the best
David
** I stress "G-Scale" as Tenmille also make Gauge 1 track - same gauge but a shallower rail profile, that won't suit G-Scale flanges. There's a "Tenmille G-Scale point" on eBay at present that is actually Gauge 1!