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  2. Lego Trains - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lego_Trains

    The train sets used blue rails, and the first train sets were simply push-along. Set number 115 introduced 4.5 volt battery-operated trains (initially the battery box was handheld, but train sets soon contained a railcar that carried the battery box), and train sets numbered 720 (1969) and up operated on 12-volt electrified rails, introduced in ...

  3. 10 Vintage Train Sets That Are Worth Digging Out of Storage - AOL

    www.aol.com/finance/10-vintage-train-sets-worth...

    Read more The post 10 Vintage Train Sets That Are Worth Digging Out of Storage appeared first on Wealth Gang. ... the pre-production prototype of this 381E Standard Gauge model is a behemoth in ...

  4. Mehano - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mehano

    The Train Line was their entry-level offering for children, while the Prestige Line was their top-of-the-line offering that allowed connectivity to Digital Command Control and sound. Mehano H0 scale products were made for the two-rail direct current system, but they made three-rail, Märklin-compatible versions of some locomotives.

  5. Supertrain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Supertrain

    Supertrain was the most expensive series ever aired in the United States at the time. The production was beset by problems, including a model train that crashed. NBC paid $10 million for a total of three sets of trains: a full-size train with enormous passenger cars measuring 64 by 26 by 22 feet (19.5 m × 7.9 m × 6.7 m), and two model train sets at 1:9.6 and 1:48 scales for outside shots. [1]

  6. Toy train - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toy_train

    An O gauge Marx toy train set made in the late 1940s or early 1950s. The modern standards for toy trains also include S gauge, HO scale, N scale, and Z scale, in descending order of size. HO and N scale are the most popular model railway standards of today; inexpensive sets sold in toy stores and catalogs are less realistic than those sold to ...

  7. Playart - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Playart

    This included replicas of the Japanese hi-speed Shinkansen. Many were copies of Lima brand trains from Italy. These trains were also sold under the brand names of Model Power and Tomy (Japan). Playart's airplane line was the 'Fastwing' series. These were mostly diecast. There was a larger (1/148 scale) and a smaller (1/215 scale) size.

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