They are different sizes.
No, triang is oo gauge and will connect to ho as long as the track code is OK. But N gauge is much smaller.
The difference between h and o is that h has a hu sound o has an oh or an oo sound.
One could find the layout of a OO Gauge Track from several different places. Some of the places in which one can find the layout of a OO Gauge Track are: Any Rail, and YouTube.
Yes HO is older than 00
A'u ho'i (Ah-oo ho-ee).
I like buck shot. OO.
You sing the Bingo song.
You can pronounce Puʻuhonua o Hōnaunau as "poo-uh-hoh-NOO-ah oh ho-nah-oo-nah-oo".
IMPROVED: ho'oulu loko [ho oh-oo-loo lo-ko] or [ho ohl-loo lo-ko]
'Oku talavou ho tokoua.- 'OKU is pronounced: O-COO- TALAVOU is pronounced: DAH-LAH-VO-OO- HO is pronounced: HOH- TOKOUA is pronounced: DO-KOH-OO-AHBut brother can also be "tuonga'ane" - pronounced "DUO-NGA-AH-NEH"Added together it is -O-COO DAH-LAH-VO-OO HOH DO-KOH-OO-UA^^ 'Oku talavou ho tokoua
No, the track is too narrow for the train to run on, as O guage has a wider wheel base than OO Gauge
HO is a gauge (scale) for model trains. The name HO comes from the fact that it represents a reduction of half from the earlier O gauge ("Half O"), which was more popular in Europe. The ratio for HO gauge equipment is 1:87 which means that the HO tracks are 16.5mm apart, or 1/87th of a standard train track (1435mm). In Europe, an almost exactly the same scale is called OO (pronounced "Double O"), even though it is much closer to half of O scale than double it (it is actually called "Double O" because there are two O's (OO) in the scale name).