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I am modeling HO (1:87) scale trains. A scale mile is approximately 60.68 feet. How long, in real time, should the model take to traverse this distance to cover the distance at a scale 10 MPH, or 30 MPH, and so on. I know there has to be a simple formula for making these calculations, but, I really didn't pay much attention in math class. Help me out here, please.

2006-07-26 19:42:08 · 4 answers · asked by Samurai Hoghead 7 in Science & Mathematics Mathematics

4 answers

The model will appear most realistic if you simply don't scale time. At 10 MPH, it takes 1/10 of an hour = six minutes to traverse a mile. So your model train should traverse the scale mile in 6 minutes. Or 1/30 hour = 2 minutes at 30 MPH.

This is easier in metric units, btw. If the real train goes 20 meter per second, your model train goes 20/87=0.23 meter per second, that is 23 centimeter per second.

2006-07-26 19:54:31 · answer #1 · answered by helene_thygesen 4 · 2 2

If the model is to scale, and it's traveling a scaled mile, then it would take the same amount of time to travel in 1:87 scale as the full size train does in 1:1 scale.
60 mph = 1 mile per minute or, to scale, 60.68 feet per minute
30 mph = 0.5 miles per minute, 30.34 feet per minute
10 mph = 0.167 miles per minute, 10.1134 feet per minute

2006-07-26 20:01:18 · answer #2 · answered by cgw665 2 · 0 0

I'm guessing .5 MPH to 1.5 MPH

I could be wrong

2006-07-26 19:46:20 · answer #3 · answered by Arsh 3 · 0 0

Hmmmm... gee..... Sorry, I only know how to scale fish, not time.

2006-07-26 19:46:43 · answer #4 · answered by pieter U3 4 · 0 1

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