4 ft 8 in gauge railways - definition. What is 4 ft 8 in gauge railways
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4 ft 8 in gauge railways         
NARROW RAILWAY TRACK GAUGE WITH 1422 MM BETWEEN THE RAILS
4 ft 8 in gauge railway; 4 ft 8 in railways
4 ft 8 in gauge railways are railways with a track gauge of . This gauge is less than The first such railways were the Killingworth RailwayThe Rocket Men, by Robin Jones, p33; Mortons Media Group.
Toronto-gauge railways         
  • A [[flange rail]], which is typical of Toronto streetcar lines.
  • Queen Street West]]
  • Temporary streetcar/subway interchange to [[Davisville Yard]] (left) at Belt Line bridge
BROAD GAUGE OF 1495 MM USED IN THE TORONTO STREETCAR SYSTEM AND THE TORONTO SUBWAY
TTC gauge; Toronto gauge; 1495 mm gauge railways; English carriage gauge; Toronto gauge railways
Toronto-gauge railways are tram and rapid transit lines built to Toronto gauge, a broad gauge of . This is wider than standard gauge of which is by far the most common track gauge in Canada.
5 ft and 1520 mm gauge railways         
  • Brunel gauge]]).
  • 5ft}} gauge rail network in the Southern United States (1861)
BROAD TRACK GAUGE
Russian empire gauge; Rail gauge in Russia; Russian broad gauge; Track gauge in Russia; Five-foot gauge railway; Five-foot gauge railways; Russian gauge; 5 ft gauge railways; 1520 mm gauge railways; 1524 mm gauge railways; Russian-gauge; CIS gauge; 5-foot gauge railway; 5-foot gauge railways
Railways with a railway track gauge of first appeared in the United Kingdom and the United States. This gauge became commonly known as Russian gauge because the government of the Russian Empire later chose it in 1843 — former areas of the Empire have inherited this standard.