Goofyernmost
Well-Known Member
If that is what you think you are, I surely cannot stop you. I know you think of yourself that way because you reacted so vigorously like I was talking directly at you. Just so you know I have ridden the Peoplemover for 38 years and it always had a chance to bump into the train in front of it IF it was at a point where they were bunched up. They have kinetic energy when in motion built within their movement and it stops via friction once the magnetic power is turned off. Having a reactionary brake would tend to basically slam on the brake and it would have basically the same effect as hitting something.Assuming everything is being maintained correctly and maintenance is being done, roller coasters are actually the safest attraction in any park. They have redundant fail safe safety measures and passenger restraints that a ride like Peoplemover or a flat ride does not have. If a modern day roller coaster has a failure, it's because it wasn't being cared for at the maintenance level.
Also, the PeopleMover should be able to complete a ride stop or an e-stop without vehicles colliding. A PeopleMover vehicle running at outdoor ride speed colliding with a stationary vehicle does in fact create enough force to "misplace a strand of hair", especially on an attraction that allows handheld infants/accommodates all guests.
I'm fine riding PeopleMover knowing there's a chance the vehicles will collide because that's just what they're known for doing now. But they spent decades not doing that as often as they currently are, and there are a few people in my life I would not want on board one of those vehicles, however much of a non-issue you'd like to believe it is on the basis of all of us now just being wussy snowflakes.
When they do bump, which is seldom, they have to be close which pretty much only happens as it approaches the unload and load area. It still is a minor thing and because it is on a Flat service there shouldn't be a need to install special braking equipment because after you make the first turn you are separated by a pretty good distance. My statements are about those that think that just because they think that is how they would like it to work that is the way that the system will work.
Snowflakes, in this sense would be those people that were startled by or if their kid that was standing up on the seat were to fall. And guess who's fault that is. Is there a place in WDW that doesn't insist that people, kids in particular, remain seated at ALL times. So the parents allow them to do whatever the hell they want to and if they fall then it's Karen to the rescue and Disney is bad mouthed because something happened to their personal snowflake or they themselves felt emotionally damaged by their surprise that things in movement might not stop immediately or because they didn't insist that their children follow the rules. Then it becomes Disney incompetence that caused the problem. It's the same scenario as the ridiculous "Baby on Board" signs on cars. I don't know how many times I wanted to ram the hell out of a car, but stopped at the last minute because, gasp, there was a baby on board.
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