Monorail Automation Testing

Disone

Well-Known Member
experienced contractor struggling usually means difficult or meddling customer
Impossible. We all know Disney is the best company to work for and work with. Clearly a case of Thales just completely dropping the ball. Riiiiiight. More seriously, there are two major differences I can think of that *may* be factors in the difficulty of automating WDW's system. Vancouver does not have gates at their stations and unlike WDW's beam's, that tracks can be switched very quickly. This allows for trains to pretty much switch tracks at normal transport speeds where as at WDW, not just he train being added or removed, but the entire litterally slows down to super slow crawl.
 

wdisney9000

Truindenashendubapreser
Premium Member
But it has happened... when the monorail caught on fire and burned up on the beam.. that was how people got away. But AFAIK it was the guests doing it on their own anyways until the fire dept got there and pulled them off.

The tires have been known to get overheated and burn.. its a fire hazzard when a tire gets dragged from brake or tire failures.
I'm definitely glad they have escape hatches. But the post I was replying to implied that having monorail pilots on board would also aid in rooftop rescue scenarios. Your story seems to prove that guests would do it on their own. And for the record, I'm not opposed to have pilots. I want them to stay. But I'm confused as to what the automation is accomplishing that yields a net gain
 

ford91exploder

Resident Curmudgeon
Impossible. We all know Disney is the best company to work for and work with. Clearly a case of Thales just completely dropping the ball. Riiiiiight. More seriously, there are two major differences I can think of that *may* be factors in the difficulty of automating WDW's system. Vancouver does not have gates at their stations and unlike WDW's beam's, that tracks can be switched very quickly. This allows for trains to pretty much switch tracks at normal transport speeds where as at WDW, not just he train being added or removed, but the entire litterally slows down to super slow crawl.

Well going by Thales history on similar systems and their defense contract issues, I'd say Thales and Disney deserve each other...
 

Figment2005

Well-Known Member
I'm definitely glad they have escape hatches. But the post I was replying to implied that having monorail pilots on board would also aid in rooftop rescue scenarios. Your story seems to prove that guests would do it on their own. And for the record, I'm not opposed to have pilots. I want them to stay. But I'm confused as to what the automation is accomplishing that yields a net gain
There is a kit under the seats of both cabs that contain instructions, note taking materials, rope for repelling down the front of the train, and rope for retrieving items from the ground. Think about the worse case scenario with an emergency situation that requires evacuation on the express beam just outside of the contemporary. If there is a fire and the train must be evacuated, yes guests could evacuate onto the rooftop on their own, but they would not be able to safely repel down the front of the train onto the beam to get inside the hotel without the presence of the pilot.

The automation is an efficiency upgrade. The positioning system in use right now is going to be 45 years old tomorrow and is in desperate need of replacement. Many problems that cause long down times are due to this ancient system. The new one accurately tracks the position of the trains on the system, and central will know exactly where they are at any one time, can control how far they go, move them through switches, etc. The pilot is there to close the doors, dispatch the train, take the train to and from the shop, handle any bypass situations, and be the face of the system for the guests.
 

flynnibus

Premium Member
You could have given each train an iphone and 'find my phone' if all you needed was location awareness...

And it's amazing how Disney finally gets interested in this 'efficiency' upgrade after the high profile incidents and multiple train accidents. Yes, I'm quite convinced that's what finally got Disney thinking 'you know, we really need to address those customer complaints about holding situations on the beams'... *puke*
 

lazyboy97o

Well-Known Member
And it's amazing how Disney finally gets interested in this 'efficiency' upgrade after the high profile incidents and multiple train accidents. Yes, I'm quite convinced that's what finally got Disney thinking 'you know, we really need to address those customer complaints about holding situations on the beams'... *puke*
My understanding was that the Feds told Disney to implement these upgrades following the fatal collision in 2009. Though as recent events show such demands do not mean much.
 

monothingie

Nakatomi Plaza Christmas Eve 1988. Never Forget.
Premium Member
Original Poster
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Ok got a picture of the logo on blue. Any idea of who these guys are?
 

monothingie

Nakatomi Plaza Christmas Eve 1988. Never Forget.
Premium Member
Original Poster
But it has happened... when the monorail caught on fire and burned up on the beam.. that was how people got away. But AFAIK it was the guests doing it on their own anyways until the fire dept got there and pulled them off.

The tires have been known to get overheated and burn.. its a fire hazzard when a tire gets dragged from brake or tire failures.


Y?ou are absolutely right. The monorail pilots are probably not trained for rescue operations. They probably have awareness training about what to do on board in the event of an emergency (turn systems off, operate fire extinguisher, make emergency announcements) But i don't believe that they are trained to perform rescue operations.
 

monothingie

Nakatomi Plaza Christmas Eve 1988. Never Forget.
Premium Member
Original Poster
If you cannot automate the monorail system in 3 years, you suck. You are a failure and should be fired.

Ok, not defending Disney, but you have to design a system and incorporate it into a monorail vehicle control system that is 25 years old, using infrastructure that is 45 years old, all while being kept in service from 7AM-12AM on average every day of the year, maybe leaving 6 hours a day to work on it.
 

PhotoDave219

Well-Known Member
If they're still going to need pilots, and they're only going to use automation for select times per day, why waste the time and expense on this project? Seems like a waste of resources to me.

Because there was an accident a few years back and someone was killed.
 

Disone

Well-Known Member
Because there was an accident a few years back and someone was killed.
My assumption is the automation is for all day. Pilots will remain but more in the role of conductor. I did hear once that they will take over the train for the purposes of adding it to or taking it off a main line. But aside from that the trains will be automated once on one of the main lines: Epcot, Express and Resorts.
 

Figment2005

Well-Known Member
My assumption is the automation is for all day. Pilots will remain but more in the role of conductor. I did hear once that they will take over the train for the purposes of adding it to or taking it off a main line. But aside from that the trains will be automated once on one of the main lines: Epcot, Express and Resorts.
This
 

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