They did. An example of instead of finding an alternate solution, just switch it off.The one I miss the most is the planet rotation on Astro Orbiter. Or did I just imagine that they used to move?
They did. An example of instead of finding an alternate solution, just switch it off.The one I miss the most is the planet rotation on Astro Orbiter. Or did I just imagine that they used to move?
It’s important because it’s current state is systematic of a large part of the way the parks are run.
Personally, the more than a decade's acceptance of Disco Yeti appalls me. What if Navi River Journey's shaman was replaced with a screen, and then just stayed like that for ten years? That might not be the best analogy, but it's the closest I could come up with at the moment.
I agree. I suspect if most of the people that complain about the Yeti being broken were really being honest, they would agree. However, it's chic to complain about the Yeti, so they complain about the Yeti.Seriously, it’s a roller coaster. The effect, or lack of it, means very little to me.
It’s important because it’s current state is systematic of a large part of the way the parks are run.
LOLI know one thing... because my trips to Disney World are limited to every few years, I would be kind of ****ed if the ride was closed during my visit for the sole reason that they could address this one insignificant detail. Scheduled maintenance and major refurbishments are understandable, and an expected part of visiting any world-famous attraction or landmark. I would much rather have a nearly-perfect Expedition Everest open during my rare visit than miss the ride altogether because of one tiny flaw that only die-hards will ever notice.
If nobody else is, I'm with you 100%. Yes it would be awesome if they Yeti moved. But Disney didn't just shrug their shoulders and leave it. They at least attempted to give the illusion of movement. There's plenty of people who don't even know it's supposed to move. And when you're going by that show scene at a speed of at least 40 mph, would riders even be able to notice if it moved? I attribute the talk about the Yeti to the 'we must complain about everything Disney does' mentality. At the end of the day, I don't care if the Yeti moves or doesn't move. And outside of the huge Disney parks fans, just about nobody else does either.I know this one has some strong feelings from some people, and I have to admit I'm a little bemused by some of it, and figure I must be missing somethings. Especially after I saw a couple of people attack Iger on the thread about him as if he's directly responsible for it and it's a high crime to not have fixed the Yeti.
We all know the issue- the Yeti on Expedition Everest used to move. Now he doesn't, and instead has a strobe light effect projected onto him. The reason seems to be that the figure itself broke at some point, or it was causing structural issues with the mountain itself and they shut it down. Or both. From what I've seen the only way to fix it is to close the ride for months, actually have to remove the top of the mountain, lift the figure out for repairs, and also do some work on the mountain itself so that it can properly support the moving Yeti. And to do so is going to cost tens of millions of dollars. Do I have that basically right?
So a ton of money and downtime for something that nominally affects the ride, at best. I rode it before it opened, and over the course of the 5 years I worked there- starting about the time they opened the ride- and other visits, I've been on it plenty. The impact difference of moving yeti vs strobe yeti is small- small enough that I doubt most people would even notice it.
I don't understand thinking it's necessary to spend millions on a moment that lasts maybe a second. What return on their investment would they get that would make it worth it to spend that much money. An advertising campaign? "Look, the Yeti moves!"
I'm sure there is someone here who will be happy to put my ignorant self in place and explain how this one thing ruins their whole entire vacation at Disney, or how Disney would make billions if they fixed it, or something like that. But I don't get it.
20.40 mph..
If it means that the ride shuts down for a prolonged period of time for other than routine maintenance, then no, I don't want the yeti to move. I'll take it as it is.Why would you NOT want it back is a better question.
It was confirmed that the ride would not have to close to fix the Yeti. It could be taken out and replaced within the span of a weekend, if I remember correctly.If it means that the ride shuts down for a prolonged period of time for other than routine maintenance, then no, I don't want the yeti to move. I'll take it as it is.
If it means that the ride shuts down for a prolonged period of time for other than routine maintenance, then no, I don't want the yeti to move. I'll take it as it is.
The reality was different than what they expected. Engineers make mistakes all the time, sometimes it is because they overlooked something such as when the space shuttle blew up someone didn't consider how cold it actually got in Florida... and sometimes the engineers do everything right but the builders make changes or cut corners in the construction that cause the problems.
Register on WDWMAGIC. This sidebar will go away, and you'll see fewer ads.