Originally Posted by Stan N:
HI All
I'm new to this and a little confused. I thought O scale would be the way to go because I can see them. Anyway I didn't know about the 2 rail and 3 rail thing. So my question is . How do I know if I am getting 2 or 3 rail trains and cars ? Also do most of the O scale trains makers trains and cars work together what I mean is can you mix and match them ? O one more thing I bought some real tracks because I thought it would be a good track to start with.
Thanks a lot Stan
Basically, there is O gauge and O scale. Unfortunately, the two are all-to-often used interchangeably on eBay and other sites.
O Scale is the proportion and, since you're coming from H.O., this should be your focus. There are O scale "purists" who, accurately, include the track as part of the equation. Then there are the OS3R (O Scale on 3-Rail)/hi-rail operators like myself (though I also have pure 2-rail equipment.)
Since you're starting out, there really is no practical reason you should pick 3-rail over 2-rail unless your space is seriously restricted.
Atlas, and Weaver make scale-sized equipment in both 2-rail and 3-rail and it is clearly labeled as such. 2-rail rolling stock will work perfectly on good 2-rail track work, and pretty well on good 3-rail track work (flat-top rail like Atlas, Gargraves, amd MTH ScaleTrax). On 3-rail turnouts, you may have some problems with the frogs on #6 and above or curved turnouts. 3-rail equipment will NOT work on a 2-rail layout.
MTH is an oddball in this mix. MTH primarily makes 3-rail equipment. The wild card is that MTH also makes many of its Premier line diesel locomotives with scale wheels (fixed pilots on the diesels.) The fun part here (and I personally love this) is that the locomotives available with scale wheels (and their hi-rail versions) can switch between 2-rail and 3-rail operation and alternate wheelsets are available. Several MTH Steam locomotives are also available with scale wheels and can operate in either 2-rail or 3-rail mode, but don't have interchangeable wheelsets. All MTH rolling stock so far (with a couple of special run exceptions) are hi-rail out of the box, but MTH sells replacement trucks with scale wheels (just did one a few days ago).
MTH also ratcheted things up a bit by making their locomotives operable under AC, DC, DCS (MTH Proprietary command system) and DCC (more common in 2-rail operations). I recently got a chance to run one of my favorite diesels under DCC and it worked great right out of the box.
The ONE major advantage of 3-rail at this point is space. Everything produced to date to run on 3-rail track will negotiate a 36" radius (O-72 in 3-rail speak). That means you can have that UP Big Boy and run it on 36" radius instead of 72" radius. It will look a bit strange, but hey, fun is fun.
The old issues regarding reverse loops, wyes, etc. that gave 3-rail an electrical advantage have pretty much been eliminated with reasonably priced electronic components.
If you buy 2-rail scale cars with Kadee couplers, you do have to be mindful of the curve size. You're not going to run an 85-foot passenger car on a 36" mainline curve. But your 60-foot box cars will work fine. My new rolling stock purchases are exclusively 2-rail and I'm converting others even though I run at a 3-rail club. They look better, roll better, and are less prone to false-uncoupling problems. The down side is I have to be a lot more careful when setting up the train due to weight distribution issues.
I pretty much concur with the posts above. Do more research, assess your available space (and the type of layout operation you want to do) and the answer will come to you. The bottom line is it's your railroad and you should enjoy yourself.
As for me, I live in both worlds for now and I'm having a good time.