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Odd gauge

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Marcus Marcusson

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Aug 12, 2009, 7:25:00 PM8/12/09
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The cole- and clay-mines in Bjuv in southern Sweden used the gauge 625mm
� introduced as standard gauge in the mines in 1929/30.

http://www.abc.se/home/m10901/RAIL/bjuvgruv.html

Owner was the H�gan�s group which had Austrian main owners in those
days, which resulted in some unusual technology around the industries of
the group � for example odd gauges at some industrial tracks.

Which national measure system might result in 625mm? It�s almost exact
24�� Swedish inches (or 21� Swedish decimal-inches = 10th of a foot) ,
but as Sweden accept the meter units a lot earlier, I�m sceptical to
that explanation. Any ideas?

/M
--
SUBLIMITETSAKADEMIEN
http://www.abc.se/~m10901/

866013149e

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Aug 14, 2009, 12:18:42 PM8/14/09
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Marcus Marcusson <marcuspic...@gmail.com> writes:

>The cole- and clay-mines in Bjuv in southern Sweden used the gauge 625mm

>� introduced as standard gauge in the mines in 1929/30.

>http://www.abc.se/home/m10901/RAIL/bjuvgruv.html

>Owner was the H�gan�s group which had Austrian main owners in those

>days, which resulted in some unusual technology around the industries of

>the group � for example odd gauges at some industrial tracks.

>Which national measure system might result in 625mm? It�s almost exact
>24�� Swedish inches (or 21� Swedish decimal-inches = 10th of a foot) ,
>but as Sweden accept the meter units a lot earlier, I�m sceptical to
>that explanation. Any ideas?

See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Two_foot_gauge_railways. There
seem to have been rather a lot of them. I had always imagined the Maine
"two-footers" to be unique, but evidently they weren't.


umar

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