SyracuseDisneyFan
Well-Known Member
For me, it's hard to know what's accurate and what's not.
I was thinking they could just do away with the current Magic Band entry system and do something similar like they do on the highways down here in Florida. For example, on the Florida Turnpike - we have an automated toll pay system called "SunPass" and when you drive through a SunPass "toll" (not toll booths), you just drive through and the reader scans the transponder in the car and deducts the toll from your checking account. Similarly, Disney should've put in a "Magic Band Reader" that when you walk in, the reader scans the Magic Band (no stopping to touch "Mickey To Mickey"), and you just walk on through. They should do this for the rides, as well. This would give a more accurate wait time based on attendance count (mechanical issues would need to be factored in there, as well). Plus, if Disney wanted to, they could probably have all the attractions in the park connected up so they can see what the attendance count is at the entrance to anticipate the crowds coming in. Just a thought.... Feel free to comment away on this.
They can do similar things with Magic Bands already. This is how your on ride photo can automagically show up in your Photopass account. I think part of the issue becomes accuracy. At the tolls, each vehicle is at least what, 10 feet apart? Much easier to tag just the correct car than when people are standing within a few feet (or inches depending on the line) of each other. And if you put faith in Jim Hill, he was saying years ago that the NextGen project would collect crowd flow data so that if employees noticed people bottling up in say Adventureland, they could deploy an on-demand parade kinda thing in Tomorrowland to help draw people that way. Just add it to the list of things that haven't materialized.
I was thinking they could just do away with the current Magic Band entry system and do something similar like they do on the highways down here in Florida. For example, on the Florida Turnpike - we have an automated toll pay system called "SunPass" and when you drive through a SunPass "toll" (not toll booths), you just drive through and the reader scans the transponder in the car and deducts the toll from your checking account. Similarly, Disney should've put in a "Magic Band Reader" that when you walk in, the reader scans the Magic Band (no stopping to touch "Mickey To Mickey"), and you just walk on through. They should do this for the rides, as well. This would give a more accurate wait time based on attendance count (mechanical issues would need to be factored in there, as well). Plus, if Disney wanted to, they could probably have all the attractions in the park connected up so they can see what the attendance count is at the entrance to anticipate the crowds coming in. Just a thought.... Feel free to comment away on this.
We've found a good rule of thumb is any time 45 minutes or less is likely inflated... any time over 45 minutes is usually only wishful thinking and as the wait times climb closer to the 120 the less likely it is to be even close to reality.Yes it usually is shorter than what is posted but not always. Last visit 50 minutes was posted for Buzz and it was more like 90 min.
The wait time signs at WDW are most of the time not what they say, most of the time they are way under what they say, sometimes around it and very unlikely above it. Some examples from yesterday when I was at HWS was:
- TOT said it had a 40 minute wait, waited 5 minutes.
- Darth Vader M&G said 30 minutes, waited 10 minutes.
- TSMM said 90 minutes, the actual wait was around 20-30 minutes (I had fast passes but I oculd just tell by looking at it)
Also I remember POTC saying 30 minutes once where we only waited about 5.
This is just a friendly reminder to (most of the time) don't trust those wait time signs.
If every family was handed a card then you would be complaining that it took too long to enter a line as the CM explains it to every family. Then try to monitor boarding requirements. Then being so focused on collecting the cards the cm could lose focus on safety as scanning the the flik cards takes you away from the loading process. Then people would complain that the cm is so focus on the cards and not interacting with guests. If the wait time is a bit over posted I see no issue as you went into the queue expecting a certain wait time and if you board quicker you've gained back some of your day allowing you to experience another attraction.I've seen with my own eyes that each ride has tons of red cards, so there's no excuse for not handing them out more frequently.
I think you've misread me. I didn't mean for EVERYONE to get one, just for them to be handed out just a little more frequently than the current rate.If every family was handed a card then you would be complaining that it took too long to enter a line as the CM explains it to every family. Then try to monitor boarding requirements. Then being so focused on collecting the cards the cm could lose focus on safety as scanning the the flik cards takes you away from the loading process. Then people would complain that the cm is so focus on the cards and not interacting with guests. If the wait time is a bit over posted I see no issue as you went into the queue expecting a certain wait time and if you board quicker you've gained back some of your day allowing you to experience another attraction.
Either that or more likely just crowd manipulation.Could someone explain why a ride like Test Track right at EPCOT opening would already advertise a 30 minute wait? Is that just a guesstimate of how long it is likely to be based on previous data at an 8:00am opening?
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