Movielover
Well-Known Member
Probably why they halted further evacs. Dop may have discovered that the line could be moved to offload the reaming guest.Twitter reporting that the line is moving
Probably why they halted further evacs. Dop may have discovered that the line could be moved to offload the reaming guest.Twitter reporting that the line is moving
Acutally, no, I had to study brain development for my degree. But whatever.
Would rather be in a thunderstorm than in direct sunlight and it being 95 degrees out.Imagine being stranded up there and have a thunderstorm blow in. Its possible.
After 3 hours I would really have to go to the restroom. Seriously.
Hi! Not sure if you are up on current events, but Disney’s Skyliner system has failed spectacularly in its first week of operation and the evacuation procedure is currently being proven woefully inadequate.You'd think they would have gotten over the axe grind in the almost 3 years since this was revealed.
The monorail ran for how many decades before the fatal accident?a CM was killed operating a monorail. There have been many bus crashes. This system isn’t going anywhere.
I do really want to know how this occurred. And hopefully no one was seriously injured.
I mean, do you blame them?
At least they aren't over water.
Deleted the second tweet because the photo was from when they were practicing evacuations.
So it looks like incoming cabins from EPCOT into the rivera station collided with cabins already in the station. Cabins detach from the line and are motored through the station on wheels. So I guess somehow that movement was stopped in the station.. but the EPCOT line kept feeding them into the station. Or maybe somehow a stop happened in the magic window where a cabin was coming off the line and it didn't stop with the rest of the action?
Will be interesting to hear about it all when someone gets the real dirt.
EDIT: Looking again at videos.. I think it's the other way around. Cabins LEAVING rivera to epcot seemed to be the impact. So maybe what happened is the blue cabin failed to transition to the live line correctly.. and then the yellow cabins in the station fed into it.
The good news is, if that is the case, the impacts should have been at station speed.. not coming in at 11mph down to nothing.
and the evacuation procedure is currently being proven woefully inadequate.
I will say that I hope this system isn’t entirely staffed by college students. They should have some experienced people operating it. For what it is worth - and I don’t know this for a fact - a lot of the operators seemed very young to me. If so this to me is where I have issues with WDW. They take advantage of the college program and have kids running a lot of things at the parks. A system that is new for Disney should not be staffed with college students. I don’t care how great the training program is.
A few stops here and there isnt a failure, but nice job trying to paint a false narrative. Tonight's fiasco, yes. A huge set back but certainly nothing to cry foul over. Nothing was damaged, nobody was injured (unless there is a sue happy American onboard who will concoct some traumatic survival story), itll all be resolve, and the Skyliner will continue to be a much better system than the garbage monorails.Hi! Not sure if you are up on current events, but Disney’s Skyliner system has failed spectacularly in its first week of operation and the evacuation procedure is currently being proven woefully inadequate.
Maybe these are growing pains for a great system, maybe their are fundamental problems with this mode of transportation being used at WDW. We’ll have a lot of time to figure that out.
But now is a really inopportune time to attack (with excessive vitriol) people who had doubts about the system or to relentlessly spin for the brand. Even the worst politician knows that sometimes things get so bad for your position you need to step back, be quiet, and develop your arguments for a more effective moment.
I wonder if the power went out at Caribbean Beach and that stopped the rope but there was power at Riviera Station and that pushed the cabins on the rollers in the station into the cabin not moving already on the rope......One of my first responder source messaged me saying the system lost electrical power prior to the crash at the Riviera. The loss of power resulted in the cabs impacting.
The Orlando Sentinel is also reporting it was a power failure, not a collision that caused the stop.
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