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  2. Wm. K. Walthers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wm._K._Walthers

    Wm. K. Walthers, Inc., was officially founded in Milwaukee in 1932—though it started years earlier when seven-year-old William K. (Bill) Walthers got his first taste of the hobby with a small, wind-up toy train for Christmas. He continued with the hobby and eventually had an attic layout composed primarily of his scratch-built creations.

  3. Life-Like - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Life-Like

    Walthers continued to make the Life-Like line of products, aimed at beginning hobbyists and the mass consumer market, up until the 2010s. The Life-Like train sets were discontinued in 2016, along with many of the stand-alone products, although currently building kits and grass mats are still sold under the Life-Like name.

  4. Bachmann Industries - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bachmann_Industries

    Originally like most other train manufacturers, Bachmann's train sets used conventional snap-track (originally in brass, then switching to steel in the early 1980s.) In 1994, Bachmann introduced the then-revolutionary E-Z track, that featured HO track built onto a moulded plastic roadbed that could be assembled like typical HO track.

  5. LGB (trains) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LGB_(trains)

    A typical LGB model train on a garden railway layout.. The Lehmann Gross Bahn (LGB; German for "Lehmann Big Train"), made by Ernst Paul Lehmann Patentwerk in Nuremberg, Germany, since 1968 [1] and by Märklin since 2007, is the most popular garden railway model in Europe, although there are also many models of U.S. and Canadian prototypes. [2]

  6. Bassett-Lowke - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bassett-Lowke

    Bassett-Lowke produced trains from 15-inch (381 mm) gauge live steam models to Gauge 2, Gauge 1 and 0 gauge trains. The first 15-inch steam locomotive, test run on the Eaton Hall Railway in 1905, was Little Giant. Unlike other engines on the line, it was a replica of main-line locos, built for a public miniature railway at Blackpool.

  7. MTH Electric Trains - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MTH_Electric_Trains

    In 2009, the two joined forces, allowing MTH Trains to produce the Lionel tinplate electric trains with the official graphics. The interior electronics are from MTH Electric Trains, but the exterior bears the Lionel Corporation graphics. [2] In June 2020, it was announced that the CEO, Mike Wolf, will be retiring.

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