PhotoDave219
Well-Known Member
Sooooooo....is it time to replace these antique monorails yet?
They've been in service since 91. This is 2016. 25 year old trains or so.
Sooooooo....is it time to replace these antique monorails yet?
Looks like they need more rehearsals and practice as they sure dropped the ball on this one....4 hours to get a few people out of a monorail?
Exactly the situation shouldn't have happened at all there's no excuse for the condition of these trains. RCES seems to have handled this exactly as expected, I didn't hear any news of injuries and that is their ONLY goal.I'm not faulting RCES.
I'm faulting transportation and their inability to keep the monorails working properly.
Exactly the situation shouldn't have happened at all there's no excuse for the condition of these trains. RCES seems to have handled this exactly as expected, I didn't hear any news of injuries and that is their ONLY goal.
Yep, I asked them one time why they do not practice this situation. They said that in an accelerated evacuation much greater risk is taken and the possibility of injury or loss of life to some degree is expected.If the train was on fire or guests were in some sense of actual danger, they would have handled the situation differently.
I have a serious question....
Why don't they tow the trains in these situations? It would be 5,000 times safer, and more convenient (as a bonus), to drive a tugger out, latch on, and pull it to the nearest platform. Nobody has to climb out onto a scissor lift (which I'd struggle with, given my fear of heights) after being unnecessarily trapped in a sweatbox for hours.
I just don't get why these evacs have to happen. There's obviously a major reason why it's impossible, otherwise they'd be doing it.
I have a serious question....
Why don't they tow the trains in these situations? It would be 5,000 times safer, and more convenient (as a bonus), to drive a tugger out, latch on, and pull it to the nearest platform. Nobody has to climb out onto a scissor lift (which I'd struggle with, given my fear of heights) after being unnecessarily trapped in a sweatbox for hours.
I just don't get why these evacs have to happen. There's obviously a major reason why it's impossible, otherwise they'd be doing it.
They've been in service since 91. This is 2016. 25 year old trains or so.
The trains may not be in perfect condition, but for the amount of time they are in operation Disney does a pretty good job keeping them up and running.
And? These are not autos. 25 years is not that old for equipment in the transportation world. Proper maintance is a must, and when it is being performed age is not really important.
The goal is safety not speed.
I understand that...but what if there is a fire....your options are what, burn or jump while waiting on a scissor lift?
There wasn't a fire. If there was a fire things would have been handled entirely differently using different procedures.I understand that...but what if there is a fire....your options are what, burn or jump while waiting on a scissor lift?
There wasn't a fire. If there was a fire things would have been handled entirely differently using different procedures.
It was amazingly loud at the Poly. Just the two major flashes and it may not have sounded like the typical thunder. They were both more like one tremendous bang sound not rolling thunder.This is interesting, I was on property at the time as well within a mile or two of Magic Kingdom and I didn't hear any thunder or see any lightning. There was a lot of rain, but it didn't last more than 20 minutes.
Except they don't.
When you've gotten to the point that every morning buses are scheduled and idling in a lot, waiting for the monorail to break - which is does, several times a week - then you've got a giant problem.
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