Mmmm....somewhat confusing.
I have been used to British standard gauge of 4' 8.1/2" having enjoyed(?) scales that include 00, 0, TT and H0. Narrow gauge is new to me hence my questions.
What I like about G gauge is the tight radii which can be achieved with short wheel base locomotives and wagons.
What is the smallest radii my LGB 0-4-0 locomotive will negotiate, please?
What about SM32 please? What track gauge would that be?
Sarah
Hi Sarah, I was busy typing out my reply above when you posted your next one...
Your Stainz 0-4-0 will actually get round some incredibly tight curves..... although LGB's own tightest radius is their "Radius 1" which is about 2' (4' diameter circle), there are specialist track makers who go smaller than this - Bertram Heyn in Germany makes R0 (Radius 0) track including some lovely rustic random-sleeper track for representing "field railways" (Feldbahn in German):
http://www.modell-werkstatt.de/gleissystem/gleise/index.htm
In addition, it is (or used to be) possible to get circles of 45mm gauge track right down to about 21" in diameter, designed to go round barrels and water features as little "gimmick" displays - I say "used to" because the ones made by Aristocraft are now out of production and virtually unobtainable even second-hand - I've been looking for one of their 32" circles for ages and can't find one!
BUT, there is a caveat - with any track circle or bend tighter than LGB's R1, the LOCO will run round it, but you MAY not be able to pull anything with it! This is because the tighter the curve, the more the front and back of the loco swings out, and there comes a point where there isn't enough sideways movement on the couplings to allow this to work - as the loco swings into the curve, the couplings will lock up and drag the wagons off the track...
There are ways round this, such as using chain couplings (very much like the real thing) rather than the LGB hooks and loops, but even then you need to do some careful testing to see what will and won't work.
To answer your last question, SM32 is 32mm gauge track (the same width as Gauge 0), see my last post on "16mm scale" railways....
Jon.