Puzzle for Wednesday

HobbitFertang

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Hi folks, here's a Wednesday puzzle: If Jane builds a G-scale replica of her house and garden complete with her G-scale garden layout . . . what scale would Jane's 'model' of the garden layout need to be?? . . . answers on a postcard.
 
Now, this is an area of thought that tends to make my brain go all fuzzy ....................... pure maths wasn't my strong point.

So I reckon the answer is going to be either 1:45 or 1:506

As 1:45 seems plainly illogical, I've got to go with 1:506

* the assumption being that we're using 1:22.5 as being a rough representation of G scale
 
just to confuse the imperial thinking:
if i take a metre (39.4" )
and divide that into 22.5 parts, i get 44.44 mm = millimetre (1.75" )
if i divide these 44.44 mm into 22.5 parts, i get 1.975 mm (0.08" )
using those numbers, i divide one metre by 1.975 mm ( = 0.001975 metres), i get 506.33
so, scale 1:506.3 it should be. (for ship modellers a quite normal relation)

just for the fun of it:
an inch should be built at about 0.005 mm
a foot would be about 0.6 mm long.

for modeling in that scale one would need additional tools.
absolutely needed a looking glas.
recommended a microscope.

or, to put it into relation: a loco in 1:506.3 would reach up to the trouser's seam of your LGB stationmaster.

panther-sherlock.jpg ...... scale-506.jpg
 
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or 3D printing maybe??
The problem is that in T scale, the trains have to have magnets to keep them on the track - they're so tiddly.

So, by the time you've got the gauge down from 4' - 8.5" to somewhere between 2' - 0" and 3' - 0" ................... you've definitely gone berserk :lipssealed::lipssealed::lipssealed:
 
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