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Modeled at 1:64 scale, S gauge runs on two-rail track with the rails .884
inches apart. The first trains marketed as S gauge appeared in the 1930s
when American Flyer marketed a 1:64 scale train that ran on 3-rail track
similar to that of Lionel. Following WWII, American Flyer introduced
an S gauge train running on a two-rail track for greater realism, and S
gauge entered its heyday, which ended around 1959. Today, S guage is
one of the fastest growing scales amoung collectors as S guage products
run reliably, track well and are modeled to prototypical accuracy.
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