So cool to see someone else build a TT scale layout. TT scale was pretty popular in east Germany. My dad had a lot of rolling stock that he now gave to me and I'm building a layout for it.
@@emily36130 very nice! Yes TT took off in eastern europe for reasons unknown. Possibly it was the fact it was small and could fit in a smaller apartment or be portable that made it appealing. Or even the fact it was a IS invention that peaked curiosity. Ether way its thanks to Eastern Europe that TT survived and thrived. Now it is starting to reclaim its long lost land.
@@petevonstettina8627 ebay, tillig, zeuke TT, Hornby UK, these are just a few sourced but most the stuff you find outside of zeuke and ebay is European prototypes
@@mattsmocs3281 That's an incredibly obscure gauge to model in. Beautiful design to that switching pattern. Are you going to add buildings and scenery?
@@petevonstettina8627 yes, it is odd but it is the most American invented here scale. Literally everything is 1/10" a inch to a foot! I have a large grouping of buildings and scenic work this will be very pretty when done
So cool to see someone else build a TT scale layout. TT scale was pretty popular in east Germany. My dad had a lot of rolling stock that he now gave to me and I'm building a layout for it.
@@emily36130 very nice! Yes TT took off in eastern europe for reasons unknown. Possibly it was the fact it was small and could fit in a smaller apartment or be portable that made it appealing. Or even the fact it was a IS invention that peaked curiosity. Ether way its thanks to Eastern Europe that TT survived and thrived. Now it is starting to reclaim its long lost land.
Where can you even buy TT??
@@petevonstettina8627 ebay, tillig, zeuke TT, Hornby UK, these are just a few sourced but most the stuff you find outside of zeuke and ebay is European prototypes
@@mattsmocs3281 That's an incredibly obscure gauge to model in. Beautiful design to that switching pattern. Are you going to add buildings and scenery?
@@petevonstettina8627 yes, it is odd but it is the most American invented here scale. Literally everything is 1/10" a inch to a foot!
I have a large grouping of buildings and scenic work this will be very pretty when done