MrPromey
Well-Known Member
Originally posted by coopdog
I think if disney built some buses only roads. the buses could make trips from one place and back faster with faster top speeds less brakeing at all the stop lights, would save a lot of time at peak times when the roads are jamed .It would save fuel, less upkeep all around for the buses, one bus could make more trips in one hour so less buses would be needed. disney would have to do alot of planing but I think some thing like this would cost a lot less then a monorail expansion.
Based on everything I have heard in this thread, others, from this site and many others, I think that the solution will need to be something bus-like and something we probably won’t be seeing anytime soon unless it’s something along the lines of what coopdog suggested - bus-only roads. I don’t think it would be practical to pave separate roads everywhere for busses everywhere but some key roads (like short-cuts) that might send guests more directly to some areas, would make some sense as long as they could keep the driving guests well away from them. I know that mechanically, they could easily put sensors (automatic garage door opener type devices) in the busses and “authorized vehicles” which would lift access arms but if cars try to follow them in (people do silly things like that sometimes) it could create headaches… I guess they could put in guard gates but the lack of automation might be an issue. In any event, I’m confident that such a system would not be difficult to figure out…
Right now, I don’t think there really is a good “high-tech” system to replace what they’ve got. Most of us understand why just about anything on a track would be problematic. What about modified courtesy trams? Like enclosed versions of what you ride on the backlot tour? (then again, maybe not) The whole alternative fuel thing sounds like a great idea but until more has been done with it, on a smaller scale, I don’t think it’s a good idea for Disney. If the local town on the beach near here that only uses one conventional bus wants to buy two alternative fuel busses and drive them around I’m all for it. Maybe when version 2.0 or 3.0 comes out, the costs come down and we know that Disney won’t have a ton of problems with them, one of the alternative fuel systems would not be such a bad idea but like I said before, technology moves a lot quicker today than it did even a few years ago. As one example, not so long ago, the government was pushing auto manufacturers to do more with electric cars, then it became the hybrids and now they are jumping on the fuel cell wagon. We all know how slowly government works, if they are jumping from technology to technology like this in a ten year period, how much more is industry going through in the same amount of time? If Disney upgrades to the latest and greatest and spends hundreds of millions or billions to do so, and then two or three years later a newer, more efficient system is made available, there is no way they can afford to dump what they’ve got and upgrade. And then when Sea World or Universal pays half the price for the newer, better system with all the bugs already worked out, the same people who want monorails all over WDW today will be talking about how much better everyone else’s systems are…
Just as a side note, way back towards the beginning, someone posted a map that showed a rail system that would go from Disney to the rest of the Orlando area. I’m about 99% that that’s not Disney’s deal. Right now the state of Florida is in the process of planning a high speed rail that will connect the big cities and local governments in the Orlando area were looking into a branch of light rail that would stem off of their station for the high speed rail. Disney is not being totally cooperative with this because they don’t want a direct line from I-Drive to WDW. They want a stop with a separate route to their location because they don’t want to make it incredibly easy for their guests to hop on a monorail-like device and whiz right down to Universal or any of the slew of tourist shops on I-Drive (they already know that adding even one transfer will turn off a lot of their guests from bothering it and it’s understandable, because they don’t want to make it as easy to get to Universal from one of their resorts as it is to get to one of their parks). Conversely, for the exact same reason, Universal and the rest of them are pushing for one continuous track… In the end, Disney will probably get their way because in order for the system to be practical for tax payers, there has to be a line that reaches Disney and in order to do that, they either need Disney to give or let them use their land for track and a station or they have to condemn the land so that they can take it. Disney has already stated that if they try to condemn the land, Disney will fight it which means it could be delayed for a decade or more in court costing the taxpayers more than the cost of a separate track and train in the end…