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Model Railroader covers a variety of scales and modeling techniques for engines, rolling stock, right-of-way, structures, and scenery. It reviews products including ready-to-run models as well as kits, tools and supplies. The magazine presents blueprints and photographs of prototype equipment, as well as photographs of models and layouts.
Martin Evans (1916 – 29 December 2003) was influential in the field of model engineering and locomotive design, and also worked as the technical editor and eventually managing editor of the English magazine Model Engineer. [1]
This is a list of people (real or fictional) appearing on the cover of Rolling Stone magazine in the 2020s. This list is for the regular monthly issues of the magazine, including variant covers, and does not include special issues.
Rolling Line is an independent PC and VR sandbox game developed and published by New Zealand game developer Gaugepunk Games.The game simulates railway modelling with a low-poly aesthetic in which players can explore and create model-train layouts and share them online for others to play.
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Rolling Stone Coverwall 1967–2013 Archived 2018-07-01 at the Wayback Machine; Rolling Stone: 1,000 Covers: A History of the Most Influential Magazine in Pop Culture, New York, NY: Abrams, 2006. ISBN 0-8109-5865-1
A turntable for the Central Railroad of New Jersey. Turnplates at the Park Lane goods station of the Liverpool and Manchester Railway in 1831. Early wagonways were industrial railways for transporting goods—initially bulky and heavy items, particularly mined stone, ores and coal—from one point to another, most often to a dockside to be loaded onto ships. [4]
In 1991, starting with Issue 51, the magazine became a monthly periodical, but in 1993, the magazine dropped back to bimonthly with Issue 68. The following year, only four issues were published. The magazine ended publication in 1995 with Issue 77. [2]: 180 In 1996, the demise of GDW brought any future publication to an end.