00 vs Ho?

MarioBarb

New Member
Oct 12, 2005
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Hi

Bit new to the whole train scene here, but while browsing ebay for rolling stock I noticed someone differentaite between HO scale and OO.

Any serious difference here.

Also - how do the experts on this forum rate Hornby and Lima?

Thanks

mario
 
Long story short - HO scale/guage was first created many years ago in Germany by Marklin, with a scale of 3.5mm = 1 foot or 1:87. This scale caught on quite well on the continent and in the USA, but in Britain, they were unable to fit a motor into a UK locomotive built to that scale, so they kept the same track guage as HO (16.5mm) but increased the scale size to 4mm = 1 foot, or 1:72. So...both OO and HO use the same track guage, but OO engines, cars, buildings, people, etc. are slightly bigger than their HO counterparts.
 
Most "old time", 1870's, equipment made in the US is OO/HO. Here is the IHC 4-4-0 with the correct OO scale figures. The 4-4-0 is an OO scale (1/76) model running on HO track. I model the 1870's in OO/HO at:

http://www.pacificcoastairlinerr.com/1879/why/
Thank you if you visit
Harold

decal.JPG
 
American OO is 19mm gauge. Lionel made a bunch of it just before WWII, but not after and it's a rare collectible now. There were other manufacturers doing kits, some of which Lionel plagiarized for their line.
Nowadays, OO is confined to British modelling. There is a tinge of HO scale modelling in Britain, but not much. Effectively all the commercial scenic part is OO (4mm to 1 foot or 1:76) and the track is mostly 16.5 BUT there are groups working in 18.2 mm and 18.83 mm gauge.
Recent commercial OO models run quite well on standard HO track; older ones do not.
OO modelling of North American trains is rarer than HO modelling of British trains.
The scale ratio is 8:7, bur the British OO trains are about the bulk of American HO trains.