The Tower of Terror uses "motors" to "pull" the elevator platform downward, creating a "faster than gravity" effect, or weightlessness.
This being the case, how is it that the elevator vehicle - which is free-moving and not attached to any type of track system - remains situated on the elevator shaft platform on which it rests when the platform itself is being pulled downward faster than gravity?
In other words, if a guest's camera "floats" upward due to the drop, why doesn't the entire ride vehicle also "float" up off the falling platform? What is it that's holding the vehicle against the platform in order to prevent this from happening? Why doesn't the entire vehicle experience "airtime" much like the guests' sensation?
Tk
This being the case, how is it that the elevator vehicle - which is free-moving and not attached to any type of track system - remains situated on the elevator shaft platform on which it rests when the platform itself is being pulled downward faster than gravity?
In other words, if a guest's camera "floats" upward due to the drop, why doesn't the entire ride vehicle also "float" up off the falling platform? What is it that's holding the vehicle against the platform in order to prevent this from happening? Why doesn't the entire vehicle experience "airtime" much like the guests' sensation?

Tk