Standard gauge is generally known world-wide as being . Terms such as
broad gauge and
narrow gauge do not have any fixed meaning beyond being materially wider or narrower than standard. In British practice, the space between the rails of a track is colloquially referred to as the "four-foot", and the space between two tracks the "six-foot", descriptions relating to the respective dimensions.
Standard gauge In modern usage, the term "standard gauge" refers to . The standard gauge is dominant in most countries, including those in North America, most of Western Europe, North Africa, the Middle East, and China.
Broad gauge In modern usage, the term "broad gauge" generally refers to track spaced significantly wider than . Broad gauge is the dominant gauge in countries in the Indian subcontinent, the former Soviet Union (
CIS states, Baltic states, Georgia, and Ukraine), Mongolia, Finland (which still uses the original Russian imperial gauge of 1524mm), Spain, Portugal, Argentina, Chile, and Ireland. It is also used for the suburban railway systems in
South Australia, and
Victoria,
Australia.
Medium gauge The term "medium gauge" had different meanings throughout history, depending on the local dominant gauge in use. In 1840s, the
Irish gauge was considered a medium gauge compared to Brunel's
broad gauge and the narrow gauge, which became the modern
standard gauge.
Narrow gauge In modern usage, the term "narrow gauge" generally refers to track spaced significantly narrower than . Narrow gauge is the dominant or second-dominant gauge in countries in Southern, Central, and East Africa; Southeast Asia; Japan; Taiwan; the Philippines; and Central and South America. During the period known as the "
battle of the gauges", Stephenson's standard gauge was commonly known as "narrow gauge", while Brunel's railways' gauge was termed "
broad gauge". Many narrow gauge railways were built in mountainous regions such as
Wales, the
Rocky Mountains of North America, Central Europe, and South America.
Industrial railways and
mine railways across the world are often narrow gauge. Sugar cane and banana plantations are mostly served by narrow-gauge.
Minimum gauge Very narrow gauges of under were used for some
industrial railways in space-restricted environments such as
mines or farms. The French company
Decauville developed and tracks, mainly for mines;
Heywood developed gauge for
estate railways. The most common minimum gauges were , , , , or .
Break of gauge in 1843Through operation between railway networks with different gauges was originally impossible; goods had to be transshipped, and passengers had to change trains. This was obviously a major obstacle to convenient transport, and in Great Britain, it led to political intervention. On narrow-gauge lines,
rollbocks or
transporter wagons are used: standard-gauge wagons are carried on these special vehicles, generally with wider-rail tracks to enable the vehicles to roll on and off at transfer points. On the
Transmongolian Railway, Russia and Mongolia use while China uses the standard gauge of 1,435 mm. At the border, each carriage is lifted and its
bogies are changed. The operation can take several hours for a whole train of many carriages. Other examples include crossings into or out of the former Soviet Union: Ukraine/Slovakia border on the
Bratislava–
Lviv train, and the Romania/Moldova border on the
Chișinău–
Bucharest train. A system developed by
Talgo and
Construcciones y Auxiliar de Ferrocarriles (CAF) of Spain uses variable gauge
wheelsets; at the border between France and Spain,
through passenger trains are drawn slowly through an apparatus that alters the gauge of the wheels, which slide laterally on the axles. A similar system is used between China and Central Asia, and between Poland and Ukraine, employing the
SUW 2000 and
INTERGAUGE variable-axle systems. China and Poland use standard gauge, while Central Asia and Ukraine use . ==Dual gauge==