Installera Steam
logga in
|
språk
简体中文 (förenklad kinesiska)
繁體中文 (traditionell kinesiska)
日本語 (japanska)
한국어 (koreanska)
ไทย (thailändska)
Български (bulgariska)
Čeština (tjeckiska)
Dansk (danska)
Deutsch (tyska)
English (engelska)
Español - España (Spanska - Spanien)
Español - Latinoamérica (Spanska - Latinamerika)
Ελληνικά (grekiska)
Français (franska)
Italiano (italienska)
Bahasa Indonesia (indonesiska)
Magyar (ungerska)
Nederlands (nederländska)
Norsk (norska)
Polski (polska)
Português (Portugisiska – Portugal)
Português - Brasil (Portugisiska - Brasilien)
Română (rumänska)
Русский (ryska)
Suomi (finska)
Türkçe (turkiska)
Tiếng Việt (vietnamesiska)
Українська (Ukrainska)
Rapportera problem med översättningen
I know it's been over a year since your comment, but that's kind of a part of the American narrow gauge experience. These weren't the big common-carrier routes (D&RGW being a notable exception), these were mostly small lines meant to serve remote industries that the standard gauge lines couldn't reach, put together as hastily and cheaply as possible without being too unsafe. Honestly, the only narrow gauge lines you would even see something as elaborate as this on would be meter gauge and 600mm gauge lines in central Europe, and the cape gauge lines in Japan.
1. Place track, turn
2. Place track, turn
3. Place track, delete #2, turn
Repeat.