Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
This scale was used by Revell for some ship models because it was one-half the size of the standard scale for wargaming models used by the U.S. Army. 1:535: 0.022: 0.570 mm: Ship models: Scale used by Revell for USS Missouri ship. Sometimes called "box scale" because chosen to fit a box size. 1:500: 0.610 mm: Architecture. Ship models. Die-cast ...
Date/Time Thumbnail Dimensions User Comment; current: 21:18, 9 November 2008: 1,120 × 640 (6.57 MB): NE2 == Summary == This is a map of the Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago and St. Louis Railway (Big Four) drawn on the New York Central system as of 1918, with trackage rights in purple.
The C-57D was recreated as a large-scale miniature kit by Polar Lights in 2001 and was labeled as being a 1:72 scale, injection-molded, all-plastic model kit, which is 28 inches (71 cm), a scale of 168 feet (51 m) in diameter; 1:72 is a standard international plastic aircraft model scale. The kit included complete "under the dome" interior crew ...
The Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago and St. Louis Railway, also known as the Big Four Railroad and commonly abbreviated CCC&StL, was a railroad company in the Midwestern United States. It operated in affiliation with the New York Central system. Its primary routes were in Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, and Ohio. At the end of 1925 it reported ...
Compensation including trackage rights over the tracks of The Baltimore and Ohio Southwestern Railroad Company from Ivorydale Junction to Cincinnati Junction, Ohio, and use of the Cincinnati union depot and tracks, also Big Four's track from Franklin Junction to Wells, Ohio, was based on a rate of $4.50 per loaded freight car, and $2.25 for ...
The Cleveland, Akron and Cincinnati Railway Company, herein called the Cleveland, Akron and Cincinnati, a single-track railroad extending from Hudson to Columbus, Ohio, 143.767 miles, and from Killbuck to Morrow, Ohio, 182.033 miles, with a branch line from Kramore Junction, Ohio, to a point near West Lebanon, Ohio, 9.3S6 miles, or 335.186 miles in all.
The line of the Cincinnati, Sandusky and Cleveland extending from Dayton to Springfield, Ohio, about 24 miles, was operated by the Big Four from July 1, 1889, to October 30, 1890, under a lease dated November 28, 1870, which was acquired by the Big Four from the Cleveland, Columbus, Cincinnati and Indianapolis Railway Company on July 1, 1889.
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Help; Learn to edit; Community portal; Recent changes; Upload file