times since the counter was installed.
NOTE: Page size is limited by HTML to 30kB; thus, I have been forced to add new pages just for Z-Scale, more Z-scale, and articles about Z-scale.
Datsun/Nissan Z cars
If somehow you got here in error while looking for Datsun/Nissan Z cars, go away!
No, really, you are welcome, but you need to look elsewhere;
you might start at the Z Car Home Page.
(10 Jan 07)
On the Z-Scale Continuation Page 5
Z-Scale Continuation Page 6
Freudenreich Z-Scale page:
You may also wish to see how I take the detailed photographs on the these pages; see my model RR page 4.
Z-Scale model railroading, at an incredible 220 times smaller than life size, or slightly under half the size of the familiar HO scale, with rails only 6.5mm (~¼") apart, was started in 1972 by Gebrüder Märklin (Maerklin Brothers - der site ist auf Deutsch) in Göppingen, Germany, as "mini-Club". It is now handled in the U. S. by Märklin, Inc., in New Berlin, Wisconsin, and their site has a Z page. The renowned N-Scale manufacturer, Micro-Trains Line Co., in Talent, Oregon [itself a brotherly spinoff from equally-renowned Kadee Quality Products Co. (no website), the coupler manufacturer in Medford, Oregon], now has a large line of Z-scale locomotives and cars.
BUT - there are smaller sizes and scales! Wherefore this page.
The leading U.S. manufacturer of Z is still Micro-Trains; they have a trio of Z-scale SP 2-6-0 Moguls that is truly scrumptious! They are, however, based on Nn3 models.
Here's a teaser:

Z scale is about 2½ times smaller than HO! In Z scale, a scale ¼-mile is exactly (and only) 6 feet; in other words, a mile is only 24 feet!
HO is a mix of metric and English measurements in a scale of 3.5mm to the foot or 0.138" = 1', which is about 1:87.1. HO-gauge rails are 16.5mm or 0.650" (<3/4") apart.
Z is still the smallest production scale available today, but - - -
There is a famous 1900 Fabergé Egg that represents the Trans-Siberian Railway! While the scale is not really known (to me, at any rate), it is small! The whole thing measures 10¾" (273mm) high, so the diameter must be about 4" (102mm) in diameter, leaving perhaps 1¾" (45mm) inside for a maximum track radius. I can't find a picture of the inside but this is the whole egg:

This turns out to be all wrong for the train, itself - there IS no track at all; the set is merely folded up inside the egg for storage. Keith Wills, writing on pp. 110-111 in the Apr 2005 Railroad Model Craftsman "Collector consist...", "Easter eggstravaganza", says that the set is a replica of the Czar's Imperial train on a gauge of about ¼" or very nearly Z scale and the whole train measures 1511/16" long.
(24 Mar 05)
See the SCALE and GAUGE and the SCALE CONVERSION TABLE: on the main Z-scale page.
You might also like to look at José Lopez, Jr.'s The Scale Card, for a most extensive discussion of scales. I have a write-up and photo of his Z-scale Scale Card and Scale Rule on my Z-Scale page 2.
Long Island Sunrise - Trail Chapter
(National Railway Historical Society)
Sunrise Trail Division
(Northeastern Region)
(National Model Railroad Association)
Ztrack Magazine
The Newsletter for Z Scale Model Railroading
Brooklyn Eastern District Terminal Railroad
A sampling of some of the finer (and tinier) Z accessories can be found at Microscopic Z Accessories on Z Scale Continuation Page 2; Miller Engineering material formerly here has been moved there.
Z-Scale continues on the Z-SCALE CONTINUATION Page 1.
For the story of the Berlinerwerke-Z (my layout), see the Berlinerwerke-Z Saga page, et. seq.
For tall tales of the BW and its equipment and such, visit the Berlinerwerke Apocrypha page.
Should you run across a Z-Auction (I found it on the HotBot search engine), it has nothing to do with Z-Scale; it is an electronics, computer, and Beanie Baby (really!) auction!
Oh, Hell! Wouldn't you know! Amazon.com now has some feature called
zShops, whatever they might be (I can't find any explanation on
their site).
More 1:900 Scale - Tiniest Trains
Slim (Justus Bauschinger) at
Lilliput continues to add Tim and Laura Dillon's newest output
in 1:900; here are representative Tiny Trains samples (they are
not exactly inexpensive):
"Huge" 24"-long Layouts with two trains:
Last but hardly least:
Best regardZ, S.B.,III
To contact S. Berliner, III, please click here.
(10 Jan 07)

(photos from Lilliput website - all rights reserved)
7" Summer and 7" Fall


7" x 24" Fall Scene (dogbone) and 14" x 24" Bi-Level

Two 7' ovals, the City Express and the Desert Chief

Scenery-intensive - A circus and the ICE Train circling a golf course

Smaller and smaller - 7" Old-Time Steam Passenger loop and 4¼" loop

Ridiculously-small - a train in an eyeglass case
(relax - it only runs back and forth)

How about a layout in a book?

A complex, highly-detailed layout in a pistol case!
(photos from Lilliput website - all rights reserved)
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To tour the Z-scale pages in sequence, the arrows take you from the first Z-scale page
to the Z-Scale index, then to this page, continuation pages 1 and up, the Z articles page,
the 6 BW-Z saga pages, and, and finally to the current Ztrack page.
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