Disneyhead'71
Well-Known Member
Yes, and Kong's seat 72 people. I'm not sure how many F&F's RV seat, but I think it is more.Aren’t the trucks from Skull Island and Fast Furious LPS?
Yes, and Kong's seat 72 people. I'm not sure how many F&F's RV seat, but I think it is more.Aren’t the trucks from Skull Island and Fast Furious LPS?
It could now, easily, IF they went with a Rise of Skywalker timeline. It could be Star Wars:Search for the Wayfinder and set on the Endor system planet that has the Death Star wreckage, just like the first scene of the new Star Tours.Yes, but a Star Wars boat ride doesn’t really make sense.
I have a question about the virtual queuing vs. Boarding Groups. Are they basically the same thing or completely different. When enrolled in the boarding group how do you know when your group will be boarding? Do you have to hang around the land until they make an announcement? Do they do it via the MDE program? If you are out casually looking and experiencing the rest of the park while you wait, how much time in advance to you get to finish whatever attraction you are either experiencing or have invested a large amount of time in that attraction queue waiting?Agreed - I'm surprised this is even controversial. Virtual queuing offers all the benefits of first come, first served with a fraction of the drawbacks, especially after removing RotR's sky-high demand and capacity challenges from the equation.
I have a question about the virtual queuing vs. Boarding Groups.
1. Are they basically the same thing or completely different.
2. When enrolled in the boarding group how do you know when your group will be boarding?
3. Do you have to hang around the land until they make an announcement?
4. Do they do it via the MDE program?
5. If you are out casually looking and experiencing the rest of the park while you wait, how much time in advance to you get to finish whatever attraction you are either experiencing or have invested a large amount of time in that attraction queue waiting?
I'm sorry about all the questions, but I haven't been following this discussion because I wasn't thinking that I would really be involved due to how long it will be before I go back there. But, I am curious about how that works.
I don't think I'd like the vehicles any larger in ROTR. To me it seems like a perfect intimate amount of people with you to make it really feel like it's just "us."Can an LPS vehicle be larger? Say three rows of four?
You can also check which boarding groups are currently loading in the app, regardless of where you are located.1. They are the same thing. The virtual queue is made up of several (over a hundred) boarding groups.
2. You will get a notification in the MDE app, and there are boards around DHS (not sure of exact locations) with the groups currently being called.
3. No, you can even leave the park if you wish. You have 2 hours to return to join the actual ride line.
4. Yes.
5. 2 hours.
Some notes here that people can correct.It’s important to note that Peter Pan’s Flight has ridiculously long lines nearly five decades after it opened and it’s not even that good. Meanwhile I walked right onto Forbidden Journey in the middle of the day the year it opened. It’s a matter of supply and demand that won’t be changing any time soon. Rise of the Resistance was foolishly designed with low throughput. Imagine if Galaxy’s Edge pulled in the crowds some anticipated... it would be even worse.
Hopefully MMRR is far better-designed in this regard and won’t have a similar issue.
Rise of the Resistance was designed with a maximum theoretical capacity of 2117 per hour. That is not foolishly low.
The issue has been downtimes and capacity limiting technical issues, not designed capacity.
As for Peter Pan's Flight, I'm with you 100%. It's probably the single most overrated attraction on Disney property.
Another bottleneck would be the Kylo/Hux scene. This scene from doors open to doors close is almost 30 seconds exactly. As far as I know there aren't two versions of this scene (just two paths to get to it), so even if vehicles were dispatching at 27.2 seconds, they would have to be held and would ultimately cascade ahead of this scene. It's possible multiple vehicles can be in this space at the same time (one just entering, one just exiting), but 27.2 still seems too tight.
There's another door that's later than 2:01 that you go through around 2:07-2:08. Admittedly, I don't know the full layout here so it's very possible I'm mistaken on the length of these scene from a show quality standpoint.I don't see the 30 second bottle neck at the Bridge scene. From this POV, I see the doors open at 1:38, the the vehicles leave ~2:01 which is 23 seconds. 4 seconds is plenty of time to reset that scene.
I am not saying it is possible to reach the theoretical number, but that doesn't seem like the hold up to me. Shortening the Interrogation room by 10 seconds would allow them to more easily hit that number, if that is the hold up.
Hopefully they will reach close to this sooner rather than later.
It varies per attraction. The THRC is not impossible (well, hitting it exactly pretty much is) but attractions usually hit at least 100 riders less per hour no matter how hard the operations team tries, because there will always be delays, slow guests, etc. The OHRC is determined by including an expected number of delays. The type of delays and how much they affect the capacity also vary per attraction.
In Disney Parks official operations terminology, "Operational Hourly Rider Capacity", or OHRC, varies per attraction and is the hourly "goal" determined by what is achievable if the Cast Members are being efficient while also factoring in an average number of unavoidable delays. It is not a blanket calculation or percentage of theoretical across all attractions.Theoretical headcount is a perfect mathematical number. Operational is 90% of that. Actual is 90% of that.
Thank you!... so when called you have at least 2 hours to wait until you will (maybe) be called to actually get on the ride. Or is that time in reality, at least 2 hours before availability. From usage, at this point, how far beyond the two hours are people waiting to ride? Making the actual queue time, about how long? Sorry for the questions, but I'm just trying to get a handle on how this works, is supposed to work vs. how it actually is working.1. They are the same thing. The virtual queue is made up of several (over a hundred) boarding groups.
2. You will get a notification in the MDE app, and there are boards around DHS (not sure of exact locations) with the groups currently being called.
3. No, you can even leave the park if you wish. You have 2 hours to return to join the actual ride line.
4. Yes.
5. 2 hours.
Test shifts have been scheduled for MMRR! Expect to hear a lot of details from loose-lipped cast members in about 2 weeks.
Thank you!... so when called you have at least 2 hours to wait until you will (maybe) be called to actually get on the ride. Or is that time in reality, at least 2 hours before availability. From usage, at this point, how far beyond the two hours are people waiting to ride? Making the actual queue time, about how long? Sorry for the questions, but I'm just trying to get a handle on how this works, is supposed to work vs. how it actually is working.
To add to this, the average wait people are actually standing in the queue once they're tapped in and going into the attraction is around 20-40 minutes to the first preshow, really not bad at all. In 5 rides my longest time between entering the line and exiting the attraction was an hour.Nooooo!
When your boarding group is called you go back to the ride. A CM will scan your bands and you go into the ride queue. It’s just that you have two hours to return. Think of it like an FP return window but two hours instead of just one.
The unknown is how long you will have to wait until your group is called. You join the BG at 7am, and you might get group 87, which might not be called until 3pm.
So no other groups are called until your group has been ushered in or like FP you will have to share with another group that was called within your two hours and they got there quicker.Nooooo!
When your boarding group is called you go back to the ride. A CM will scan your bands and you go into the ride queue. It’s just that you have two hours to return. Think of it like an FP return window but two hours instead of just one.
The unknown is how long you will have to wait until your group is called. You join the BG at 7am, and you might get group 87, which might not be called until 3pm.
It is staggered pretty well. I have shown up within seconds of my group being called, but I've also shown up an hour and 45 mins after being called as well. Regardless of when you get in line the time in the queue is taking around 20-40 minutes until the preshow. Assuming the ride is operating smoothly they can call about 15 groups an hour, one every 4-5 minutes.So no other groups are called until your group has been ushered in or like FP you will have to share with another group that was called within your two hours and they got there quicker.
I understand about the numbers and the time, but if you are in group 87 and happen to be just walking out of The Muppets, your number is called (87) and and you go straight over will you get on right away, or if you happen to take a quick run over to Epcot to ride Soarin, I am assuming that you will take priority over anyone from group 88, etc. upon your arrival. Is that correct? On average how long is it after when they call for 87 do they call for 88. It obviously isn't 2 hours because one would have a tough time calling 88 groups in a one day period unless they could figure a way to get 176 hours in one day.
So no other groups are called until your group has been ushered in or like FP you will have to share with another group that was called within your two hours and they got there quicker.
I understand about the numbers and the time, but if you are in group 87 and happen to be just walking out of The Muppets, your number is called (87) and and you go straight over will you get on right away, or if you happen to take a quick run over to Epcot to ride Soarin, I am assuming that you will take priority over anyone from group 88, etc. upon your arrival. Is that correct? On average how long is it after when they call for 87 do they call for 88. It obviously isn't 2 hours because one would have a tough time calling 88 groups in a one day period unless they could figure a way to get 176 hours in one day.
Register on WDWMAGIC. This sidebar will go away, and you'll see fewer ads.