three variants of the Babelsberg , along with tipper and flat wagons, were being manufactured by Technomodell, plus left-and-right-hand points, and flexi-track using rail. The NS2f models were completely metal in order to improve traction and allow gradients of three-percent to be negotiated with wagens. In 2008 the company Panier were producing a model of the Lanz-Rail tractor in H0f gauge, For the fiftieth-anniversary of the Saarbrücken Park Railway (
de) in 2010, a model of the "Porschelok" (
de) and matching carriages were produced in H0f.
Busch Feldbahn H0f track and locomotives made by the German company Busch include a central magnetic strip hidden between the rails for greater adhesion. The magnet under the Busch H0f locomotives is extremely effective, allowing very steep gradients, climbing vertically, or running upside down. The first Busch Mine Railway Starter Set ('''') was released in late-2010 and featured a BBA B360 mining locomotive (
de) with three wagons, The mining system was expanded with four more sets in 2011. A much larger system of narrow gauge locomotives was introduced at the 2012
Nuremberg International Toy Fair, where Busch demonstrated a complete Feldbahn system with multiple locomotives wagons and specialist track. By the start of 2016 Busch was producing a Deutz locomotive in three colours. At the 2016
Nuremberg International Toy Fair, an unpowered Lanz traktor model accompanied by a motorised goods van were shown, along with a
Decauville Type 3 steam locomotive. One year late in 2017 a model of the Frankfurt Feldbahn Museum's (
de) steam locomotive
Dimitrias was shown. The separate firm Modellbau Luft started to make alternative locomotive and "ghost wagon" housings for mounting on the Busch Feldbahn chassis. ==Track==