ray_whiley
Active member
Two quick comments -
It is quite possible to place artefacts of scale size in Trainz. As an experiment some years ago I made some model buildings to 1:12 scale to be used on a Trainz layout - not a simulation of a model railway/railroad - to create a model village. Quite effective when including normal sized Trainz visitors. This could be carried to extremes, for example 1:76 or 1:87 scale - the only problem being seeing them!
A virtual model railway/railroad could also be made to any scale by creating artefacts of appropriate size. For example, for a 1:22 scale garden railway, a shed would need to be made 22 times the normal size. Again I have made a few things and tried them out on a simple garden railway, including semi-detached cottages and a raised track bed.
For my own virtual modelling to 1:76 UK scale I use a close approximation of two metres on the baseboard equals one inch. For N gauge I would be happy with four metres to one inch. This would give a baseboard 720/4 inches in length ie.180 inches or 15 feet, whereas a 1:76 baseboard is approximately 30 feet square.
Ray
It is quite possible to place artefacts of scale size in Trainz. As an experiment some years ago I made some model buildings to 1:12 scale to be used on a Trainz layout - not a simulation of a model railway/railroad - to create a model village. Quite effective when including normal sized Trainz visitors. This could be carried to extremes, for example 1:76 or 1:87 scale - the only problem being seeing them!
A virtual model railway/railroad could also be made to any scale by creating artefacts of appropriate size. For example, for a 1:22 scale garden railway, a shed would need to be made 22 times the normal size. Again I have made a few things and tried them out on a simple garden railway, including semi-detached cottages and a raised track bed.
For my own virtual modelling to 1:76 UK scale I use a close approximation of two metres on the baseboard equals one inch. For N gauge I would be happy with four metres to one inch. This would give a baseboard 720/4 inches in length ie.180 inches or 15 feet, whereas a 1:76 baseboard is approximately 30 feet square.
Ray