MRH magazine
Release dates - February 2013 MRH (Delayed one day)
Here are the release dates for the Feb 2013 issue of MRH:
- Standard edition: Tue, Feb 5, 2013
February 2013 MRH - Landscape format - Download
THIS IS THE ORIGINAL LANDSCAPE FORMAT OF MODEL RAILROAD HOBBYIST.
For the new PORTRAIT orientation, CLICK HERE.
February 2013 MRH - Portrait format - Download
THIS IS THE NEW PORTRAIT FORMAT OF MODEL RAILROAD HOBBYIST.
For the Original LANDSCAPE orientation, CLICK HERE.
Why you should Subscribe to MRH
At least twice a month as a subscriber you receive an update e mail. Today's update contained a link to a playlist on You Tube for model railroad operations. This is a great site. It has videos of operations from at least 10 different providers and I did not try an figure out how many layouts. Open post to see links.
January 2013 MRH - Landscape format - Download
THIS IS THE ORIGINAL LANDSCAPE FORMAT OF MODEL RAILROAD HOBBYIST.
For the new PORTRAIT orientation, CLICK HERE.
STANDARD EDITION (PDF links to media) |
Useless but still kinda cool
In the online version place your cursor right on the corner of a page. Click and drag. Yes, I am easily amused
Embedded Edition?
What happened to the embedded edition? it is marked as UNAVAIL on the email I received...
A magazine feature I'd like to see
I know that content is driven by submissions, but I figure it can't hurt to throw this out there. One of my favorite features of any railroad publication has always been scale drawings. At least one magazine even goes to the trouble of listing each drawing in the table of contents, whether it's part of an article or not. Maybe it's just because I like to build my own models, and for that you really need drawings, but I'd love to see a random (or not so random, I don't care!) drawing in each issue of MRH.
Side-by-side comparison of MRH Gen1 and Gen2
In order to push past any hype, here's a side by side comparison of Gen1 to Gen2 on a computer monitor we have at MRH. This is a Windows 7 PC, with a 21" landscape monitor. The screen images in this thread are by necessity reduced to fit our web pages. The actual screen image is roughly twice the size (in both width and height) of what's shown.
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