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For Hornby customers, we will soon be moving to a new website www.hornby-direct.com where you will find the best prices and the most up-to-date products and information on Hornby Brands.
You do not need to do anything to get the best of the new site as, for Hornby products, you will be redirected automatically from our navigation menu. However, you may wish to bookmark the new site when you get there!
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Hornby Model Trains feature Hornby's Super Detail finishes with great attention to detail both to model trains and rolling stock. Hornby Model Trains have both superior exterior finish and fine interior detail. For this reason, these highly detailed railway models are aimed at adult collectors of model railways owing to the need for a certain degree of care in the handling and running of both Steam Locomotives & Diesel locomotives as well as rolling stock. Hornby has come a long way since the introduction of their first electric trains and train sets.
If you require slightly less detailed model trains, with fewer external parts, more robust and easier on the pocket then you will be interested in the special Hornby Railroad Range of locomotives and rolling stock.
"OO" or Dublo scale is 1:76, or 4mm to the foot which is also referred to as '4mm scale'.
"HO" scale (Commonly modelled on the continent) uses the same sized track, but the associated models use a slightly smaller scale at 1:87. The words scale and gauge seem at first interchangeable but their meanings are different. Scale is the model's measurement as a proportion to the original, while gauge is the measurement between the rails.
Both HO and OO share the same 'Gauge' and as a general rule, are interchangeable.
Hornby OO and Bachmann HO are the two major producers of model railways available in Britain.
Model trains have captured hobbyists imagination for many years. It is a magnificent way to spend time and to express your artistic talent. There are many aspects of model trains other then just collecting the locomotives. The model train hobby also includes building scenery as well as gaining all the knowledge that goes along with the model train like scales and gauges. Note that the term Model Train is often used, incorrectly, to refer to a locomotive when in fact it does not become a train until coupled with rolling stock whether this be coaches or wagons. Trains & Railway Models
Hornby Model Trains feature Hornby's Super Detail finishes with great attention to detail both to model trains and rolling stock. Hornby Model Trains have both superior exterior finish and fine interior detail. For this reason, these highly detailed railway models are aimed at adult collectors of model railways owing to the need for a certain degree of care in the handling and running of both Steam Locomotives & Diesel locomotives as well as rolling stock. Hornby has come a long way since the introduction of their first electric trains and train sets.
Electric trains first appeared around the turn of the 20th century. Early electric trains ran on batteries because few homes in the late 19th and early 20th centuries had electricity. Today, inexpensive train sets running on batteries are again common but regarded as toys and seldom used by hobbyists. In addition, today's electric trains are much more realistic. Today, modellers create very lifelike model railway layouts, often recreating real locations (prototypical) and specific periods in history. Involvement ranges from possession of a train set to spending hours and considerable sums of money on a large and exacting model of a railroad and the scenery through which it passes.
After the First World war, German toys such as Bachmann trains were out of favour. Identifying this gap in the toy train market, Frank Hornby the maker of Meccano, started to produce 0 Gauge tinplate trains under his own name, Hornby Trains. At first these were clockwork only, and were fastened together with Meccano-style nuts and bolts. Later, tabbed construction was to became universal. Electric propulsion became available from the early 1920s, while the Hornby Train range expanded to cover the four main-line groups as well as special export versions. The zenith was reached in the 1930s when great emphasis was was being placed on the quality of materials, paint and finish.
In 1938 the smaller (half size) scale Hornby Dublo was introduced in both clockwork and the now universal 12 volts DC electric. Hornby Dublo featured diecast locomotive chassis and bodies, with the coaches and wagons having tinplate bodies. After the Second World War, Hornby Trains became the dominant range, available in electric only, with 0 Gauge clockwork now being aimed more at younger children. Pre-war wooden buildings were replaced with more durable aluminium ones, and the range was rapidly extended. In 1958 plastic rolling stock in Hornby's 'Super Detail' was introduced, followed by a change from 3-rail to 2-rail operation. Production of all Hornby Trains was moved away from England in 1964, although some of the Hornby Dublo items were subsequently sold under the Wrenn and Triang brand names.
Hornby is the leading brand of model railways in the United Kingdom. Its roots date back to 1901, when founder Frank Hornby received a patent for his amazing and revolutionary Meccano construction toy.
The first clockwork model trains were produced by Hornby in 1920.
In 1938, Hornby launched its first OO scale model trains.
In 1964, Hornby and Meccano were bought by their competitor Tri-Ang, and sold on when Tri-ang went into receivership.
In the 1980s Hornby Railways became independent.
By the early 1990s Hornby Railways again faced competition from newcomers like Dapol and established foreign manufacturers, including model trains from Lima and Bachmann Industries. Manufacturing was moved to Guangdong province in China in 1995, completed by 1999, cutting costs and improving quality of their model trains. As part of the process Hornby Railways bought in some of Dapol's products and some of the old Airfix moulds (by then owned by Dapol).
From childhood to retirement, Hornby is the hobby you've always dreamed of!
Miniatur Wunderland (German for miniature wonderland) is a model railway attraction in Hamburg, Germany and the largest of its kind in the world. The railway consists of 12,000 metres of track in HO scale, divided into seven sections: Harz, the fictitious city of Knuffingen, the Alps and Austria, Hamburg, America, Scandinavia, and Switzerland. This Model Railways exhibit includes 890 trains made up of over 11,000 carriages, with 300,000 lights, 215,000 trees, and 200,000 human figurines. The creators are working on models of Italy and France now that the airport section is completed. The airport is named Knuffingen International Airport and is modelled on Hamburg Airport. Possible future additions include Africa, England, or a futuristic landscape. One of the biggest Model Railways in the world.
If you require slightly less detailed model trains, with fewer external parts, more robust and easier on the pocket then you will be interested in the special Hornby Railroad Range of locomotives and rolling stock.
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