Bender123
Well-Known Member
There is a sensor at the top that drops a guillotine when it hits the last tire in the station.
Universal has some ideas on this...
There is a sensor at the top that drops a guillotine when it hits the last tire in the station.
One of the gondolas where I work has three modes... all cabins, half cabins or 16 cabins in what is called pulse mode. We take all cabins off at the end of each day and start fresh every morning with the mode based on expected demand.
I suspect Disney will have almost all their cabins in service at all times. With long operating hours, they may only park all the cabins for a rare occasion like a hurricane. It is normal to have a few cabins out of service for maintenance at any given time and Disney may opt to buy extras. It looks like there will be one central cabin parking and maintenance facility at CBR South.
That video shows the entire line (cable wheel) being slowed as well. You can hear and see the flywheel is moving slower when they accommodate the wheelchair.
Its also not stopping the whole system...
So...have we figured out how it's going to break and kill us all yet?
You're right- in the video you can clearly see that they slowed the entire line to give the passenger more time to load. But take a look at the ceiling- there is another track for gondolas to be pulled out of line for stationary boarding. If this were being utilized, the line would not need to slow down at all.That video shows the entire line (cable wheel) being slowed as well. You can hear and see the flywheel is moving slower when they accommodate the wheelchair.
You're right- in the video you can clearly see that they slowed the entire line to give the passenger more time to load. But take a look at the ceiling- there is another track for gondolas to be pulled out of line for stationary boarding. If this were being utilized, the line would not need to slow down at all.
Thank you. As I suspected - @flynnibus it's not a simple matter to just pull off a gonodola or put them back on.
If you don't have any off-line capacity, you have a built in buffer that allows for late dispatches (system is not at full density). If cascading is at risk... you simply slow the main line to avoid the cascade and full stop. If worst comes to worse... you stop the line.
The use of parking/maintenance rails for stationary loading has never been done before to my knowledge. The problem is where do you find space to re-inject the cabin on an already closely-spaced line?
Nice selective memory... I'll refresh it for you
Your skewed this to your view
Both systems are capable of variable capacity... both systems have a max capacity as well.
The difference is in vehicle capacity, loading times, and minimum spacing required. These factors limit the dispatch intervals and ultimately the total throughput and average wait times.
You also ignore how fast the system can adapt. Monorails can be added or removed, but it is a long disruptive process that impacts existing traffic. Gondolas can be added or removed with almost zero disruption.
....
One of the gondolas where I work has three modes... all cabins, half cabins or 16 cabins in what is called pulse mode. We take all cabins off at the end of each day and start fresh every morning with the mode based on expected demand.
I assume you are referring to the 15:30mark in the video, I assume that track goes to the storage/maintenance area.. it wouldn't be used for loading or unloading guests.You're right- in the video you can clearly see that they slowed the entire line to give the passenger more time to load. But take a look at the ceiling- there is another track for gondolas to be pulled out of line for stationary boarding. If this were being utilized, the line would not need to slow down at all.
Nice selective memory... I'll refresh it for you
What Liftblog outlined is what I said above. Running the cabin load at different levels alters your timing sensitivity. The fuller you are, the less variance you have. But I'm sure the system tries to balance the spacing as much as possible.
At the end of the day, slowing the line isn't a big deal.
For all we know Disney could be ordering special ECV friendly cabins too...
Throw the whole system in the trash then. Because it is just so darn complicated and people are just so darn stupid for it to ever work.
Do you hear yourself? Coming up with every excuse as to why it won't work. If everyone thought like this, we would still be living in the stone age. Goodness...
There are going to some people here and there that struggle from time to time. The system will be able to handle this with little impact if CMs are trained in appropriate best practices.
Selective memory? Flynn, you said the following, which is what I was referring to (bold added):
Which, by the way is not true, as state below
Furthermore, monorails actually could be very easy to add or remove capacity. The below video shows how quickly a switch (such as to a spur with additional trains on standby) could be used.
If you look at any omnimover ride, there is a "slow" button that slows the system temporarily to load a difficult person. The ride stops in rare situations, but we know that. We also stand outside a bus for two minutes and have seen the monorail platform staff need to bring out the ramps, because the MarkVI trains have a good six inches of height over the platforms. All of these come with some sort of trade off, but to act like this problem doesn't exist (or is more severe) on other Disney transport vehicles is simply ignoring the current reality.
http://www.rollingwiththemagicblog.com/walt-disney-world-monorail/
It's a good thing we have 800 gondola experts in this thread! They can help narrow down to the top 3 causes of death by Disney Gondola!There are so many possibilities it's hard to narrow down which one it will actually be.
Try stepping back from the leap you just made from Liftblog's comments. Understand the difference between what can be done, and what their choice of operating model is. Because they chose their mode at the start of the day, does not mean it's not possible to change it. In Disney's case, they would likely run full capacity anyways.. because there is less to gain from NOT running vehicles (compared to the cycles monorails take)
Nice video that shows the switch action - but fails to address what it takes to allow that switch to be operating and what it does to the normal traffic pattern on that beam (and all the zones/blocks leading UP to that switch).
The problem with the monorail beam switching was highlighted with the recent fatal crash. Things like the switch only allows traffic in one direction... use of the switch blocks all other adjacent blocks. It's a significant orchestrated process that disrupts far more than just that one piece of track. Now try to have a system that switches all over the place like you described... and complexity (and cost) go through the roof. There is are reasons no monorail in the world is built like your suggested...
The use of parking/maintenance rails for stationary loading has never been done before to my knowledge. The problem is where do you find space to re-inject the cabin on an already closely-spaced line?
The use of parking/maintenance rails for stationary loading has never been done before to my knowledge. The problem is where do you find space to re-inject the cabin on an already closely-spaced line?
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