Carousel of Progress refurb?

Advisable Joseph

Well-Known Member
Please define “major overhaul”. Could one person call a week long closure a major overhaul? A month? A year? I mean it’s a motor, I bet they’ve replaced them at times over it’s long life right?



Cynical Disney
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Jul 10
@cynical_disney
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Replying to @cynical_disney
If Disney were to fix this issue, they would have to redo the entire carousel. The catch is though, not enough people ride it per hour and management is looking to either replace it or remove it entirely. According to my source, nothing is set in stone and these are just talks.
Emphasis mine. I can't give a timetable.
 

FerretAfros

Well-Known Member
We're talking about CoP, the attraction that never has a wait time longer than the next show...underutilized and ignored by guests for decades. 😂
It's worth remembering that COP has one of (if not the) highest hourly capacities of anything in Walt Disney World, including famously high-capacity experiences like boat rides, omnimovers, and the resort transportation system. It's one of the few (only?) attractions that has adequate capacity for every visitor to the park to be able to experience it during a typical day of operations.

Even running at only 50% utilization (which, granted, does not happen very often), it still has a higher hourly throughput than recent headliners like Flight of Passage, 7 Dwarfs Mine Train, or Tron.

The short wait isn't a flaw: it's a feature, one that was central to its inception.

ge1.jpg
 

Advisable Joseph

Well-Known Member
So is there any actual indication that something is going to happen to the Carousel of Progress or is this speculation based on nothing?
Again, from the tweet thread




Cynical Disney

@cynical_disney
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Just to be clear: this is NOT a confirmation that Disney is removing COP. Instead, it’s a heads up that it’s being talked about currently among management. If you want the ride around so future generations can enjoy it, please if you can, ride it.

This is just a voice on the Internet, but I wish I knew why I should trust the voices here. Also "Motors can be ... replaced" sounds vague to me. I know replaceable motors exist, but what about this particular facility? If someone here knew CoP cast members, things could make more sense.
 

peter11435

Well-Known Member
Again, from the tweet thread


This is just a voice on the Internet, but I wish I knew why I should trust the voices here.
But you seem eager to trust that voice on the internet you’ve quoted.

I don’t know why “motors can be replaced” sounds vague. I also don’t know why you think that this particular facility would have motors that can’t be replaced.

Why is the idea that Disney built an attraction that’s been operation for decades with motors that can’t be replaced more plausible to you than the idea that the motors can be and have been replaced?
 
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trainplane3

Well-Known Member
Again, from the tweet thread


This is just a voice on the Internet, but I wish I knew why I should trust the voices here. Also "Motors can be ... replaced" sounds vague to me. I know replaceable motors exist, but what about this particular facility? If someone here knew CoP cast members, things could make more sense.
This is like another Everest Yeti situation. "They can't work on/fix/remove the Yeti unless the mountain is torn apart".
You really think they would seal up motors (a known wear item) in an attraction that would have no way to replace aside from tearing the building open? And like @ToTBellHop said, these aren't the same motors that have been in there since day 1. CoP CMs also aren't going to have answers. Maintenance and management would. A regular CM isn't going to know the technical side of fixing the attraction, just that X thing is broken.

Why is the idea that Disney built an attraction that’s been operation for decades with motors that can’t be replaced more plausible to you than the idea that the motors can be and have been replaced?
Yep, that.
 

JMcMahonEsq

Well-Known Member
Again, from the tweet thread


This is just a voice on the Internet, but I wish I knew why I should trust the voices here. Also "Motors can be ... replaced" sounds vague to me. I know replaceable motors exist, but what about this particular facility? If someone here knew CoP cast members, things could make more sense.
Listen you can believe whatever sources you want, but why in the world do you think some random CoP cast member would have any mechanical engineering experience, or personal knowledge about the design and operation of the motors of the ride to give any knowledgeable information on what type of motors are in operation on CoP, and if they can be replaced or not?
 

Ayla

Well-Known Member
It's worth remembering that COP has one of (if not the) highest hourly capacities of anything in Walt Disney World, including famously high-capacity experiences like boat rides, omnimovers, and the resort transportation system. It's one of the few (only?) attractions that has adequate capacity for every visitor to the park to be able to experience it during a typical day of operations.

Even running at only 50% utilization (which, granted, does not happen very often), it still has a higher hourly throughput than recent headliners like Flight of Passage, 7 Dwarfs Mine Train, or Tron.

The short wait isn't a flaw: it's a feature, one that was central to its inception.

ge1.jpg
To be clear, I love CoP. I ride/watch it at least 2-3 times per trip. I don't want it to be destroyed for "something newer".

I also did not want ROA/TSI to be destroyed, yet here we are...
 

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