None of the older style would work I agree, but the newer versions in the 10-12 size I have ridden, easily accommodate both.Any idea on the size of these? Surely they must be able to fit wheelchairs & scooters?? The little ones they have at ski lifts are too small.
10 passenger cabins have a rated capacity of 1,750 lbs. Usually with a standard wheelchair one bench can remain down and a few other people loaded. The cabins are bigger than they look.10 passengers is the figure I've heard bounced around.
Given the style of proposed cabin I'd hazard a wheelchair or scooter group would take one for theirselves.
CBR South.Where will the maintenance facility be? And also, the route that's been floating around here is probably not accurate. I am 100% certain the gondolas will not travel above buildings and resort rooms.
Peter here from Lift Blog. I see someone linked to my article a few posts above. You guys can probably tell I've never been to Walt Disney World! However if anyone has technical lift questions I'd be happy to answer them. In addition to my blog about lifts I run a gondola operation at a major ski resort.
Exactly. I'd envisage the chair user and their group taking one cabin.10 passenger cabins have a rated capacity of 1,750 lbs. Usually with a standard wheelchair one bench can remain down and a few other people loaded. The cabins are bigger than they look.
You would be 100% wrongWhere will the maintenance facility be? And also, the route that's been floating around here is probably not accurate. I am 100% certain the gondolas will not travel above buildings and resort rooms.
With regard to a drop/load station mid line (if that terminology makes sense) such as what would be at what is the new DVC location (also label CBR North in places) - I'm assuming this is also be a place where the gondolas detach. It is in the middle of the line. If a passenger wants to continue I also assume you would not disembark. Would the car move through the same loading queue or could it "fast track" back onto the cable? Or could it skip detaching altogether?
Hundreds. You guys could do some math assuming cabin spacing of 130 feet on the line and approximately 6 cabins in each station at any given time (12 for mid-stations as they are basically two stations put together with the turnarounds cut off.)Has anyone stated or taken a guess at how many cabins there might be running at a given time?
Peter here from Lift Blog. I see someone linked to my article a few posts above. You guys can probably tell I've never been to Walt Disney World! However if anyone has technical lift questions I'd be happy to answer them. In addition to my blog about lifts I run a gondola operation at a major ski resort.
Hyper loop baby! Oh yeahThey're going to need to use Slo-Trans engines to get that thing up to 800mph. Preferably without an AI that's gone mad.
Peter here from Lift Blog. I see someone linked to my article a few posts above. You guys can probably tell I've never been to Walt Disney World! However if anyone has technical lift questions I'd be happy to answer them. In addition to my blog about lifts I run a gondola operation at a major ski resort.
You'd be surprised. CBR south is the transfer station.
I'd say so. To give you an idea, U.S. ski resorts added zero new gondolas from 2013-2014, only two in 2015 and one in 2016. A five-section system would be the largest ever built in North America. The contract for this may exceed the value of all other lifts (including chairlifts) built in North America combined for the year.Hi, Peter!
So, among the lift enthusiast community, is the news (well, very very very likely rumor) that Walt Disney World is going to be using Gondola Lifts a big deal?
Lift Blog, based on the likely system to be installed do you see the necessity to shut down during the daily afternoon thunderstorms?Peter here from Lift Blog. I see someone linked to my article a few posts above. You guys can probably tell I've never been to Walt Disney World! However if anyone has technical lift questions I'd be happy to answer them. In addition to my blog about lifts I run a gondola operation at a major ski resort.
I anticipate the CBR internal bus stopping at this station. It'll also bring guests here from the CBR resort whom currently take a bus to DHS and Epcot. The CBR DVC building will be quite substantial capacity wise I think too.Kind of makes sense if you include the convention business in there as it allows for multiple destinations and resort dining as well
Speaking of maintenance, what is the life cycle on these gondolas?
Anytime there's an angle change more than a few degrees, cabins must detach, turn and re-attach with a time penalty of about 30 seconds. There are examples of straight mid-stations where cabins only detach in one direction but I doubt that would apply here. (Example: Heavenly, CA https://skiliftblog.files.wordpress.com/2015/11/img_57451.jpg)
Disney execs are probably grappling with which route will most commonly be taken and that will become the direct routing, whether it's two, three or four stages. Other lines can be built tangent to the main line, but passengers will have to transfer. That shouldn't be a big deal when cabins can be spaced as little as ~15 seconds apart on each line.
Lift Blog, based on the likely system to be installed do you see the necessity to shut down during the daily afternoon thunderstorms?
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