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  1. Dec 8, 2019 · 511 views 3 years ago. Enjoy some photographs and videos from Europe's steepest standard gauge adhesion railway line, which is located in the biggest city of Switzerland - Zurich....

    • 4 min
    • 511
    • Rishad Ghiara
  2. The Uetliberg railway line is a passenger railway line that runs from the central station in the Swiss city of Zürich through the city's western outskirts to...

    • 11 min
    • 2.4K
    • DJ Hammers Trains
  3. Apr 16, 2001 · The U.S. standard railroad gauge derives directly from the width of Imperial Roman war chariots. The standard U.S. railroad gauge is similar in width to the wheel spacing of Roman chariots. That ...

  4. In a change to the previously advertised schedule, I'm filling in with a pre-record in this week's #RailNatter (we'll have our first dual-guest episode next ...

    • 56 min
    • 2186
    • Gareth Dennis
  5. Sep 25, 2023 · Standard gauge is 4 feet, 8-1/2 inches. This is the gauge used when steam railroading began. It became the common gauge of Britain, North America, and Western Europe — except for Spain, Portugal, and Ireland.

  6. The term “standard gauge” refers to the width of the tracks themselves. Standard gauge tracks have a distance of 4 feet, 8.5 inches (1,435 millimeters) between the inside edges of the rails. This may seem like an oddly specific measurement, but it’s actually based on a historical standard that was established in the early days of rail travel.

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  8. The railway gauge: 89mm to Europe. The "standard" railway gauge of 1435 mm, originally promoted by the British engineer George Stephenson, is used throughout much of the world, but not everywhere in Europe.

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