Crazydisneyfanluke
Well-Known Member
I'm at The Land. Soaring, at the moment is at 115 min wait. This expansion needs to happen sooner than later.
Needs to happen 5 years ago!I'm at The Land. Soaring, at the moment is at 115 min wait. This expansion needs to happen sooner than later.
reality check... the wait times will not go down when they open a third screen. more people will be able to see the attraction, but it will still sell out of FP weeks before the day. and the queue will be lengthened(more than likely) to hold 1/3 more capacity. so no tier changes, no standby time reduction.I'm at The Land. Soaring, at the moment is at 115 min wait. This expansion needs to happen sooner than later.
EDIT::: EPCOT needs to have a people-eater... if you cannot have omnimovers holding people off of the concrete outside, you rack-em' into queuesreality check... the wait times will not go down when they open a third screen. more people will be able to see the attraction, but it will still sell out of FP weeks before the day. and the queue will be lengthened(more than likely) to hold 1/3 more capacity. so no tier changes, no standby time reduction.
Yup, frozen is gonna be a nightmare queue..EDIT::: EPCOT needs to have a people-eater... if you cannot have omnimovers holding people off of the concrete outside, you rack-em' into queues
Yup, frozen is gonna be a nightmare queue..
This is true at very busy times of the year like now. At less crowded times the standby line should decrease. Using rough estimates if the current FP+ distribution averages 80% of capacity and they decided to make the new layout 2 FP dedicated theaters and 1 standby dedicated theater they would still be increasing FP+ capacity by 25% (from 80% of current capacity to 100%) and increasing the available standby 150% from 20% of existing capacity to the equivalent of 50% of current capacity.reality check... the wait times will not go down when they open a third screen. more people will be able to see the attraction, but it will still sell out of FP weeks before the day. and the queue will be lengthened(more than likely) to hold 1/3 more capacity. so no tier changes, no standby time reduction.
This is true at very busy times of the year like now. At less crowded times the standby line should decrease. Using rough estimates if the current FP+ distribution averages 80% of capacity and they decided to make the new layout 2 FP dedicated theaters and 1 standby dedicated theater they would still be increasing FP+ capacity by 25% (from 80% of current capacity to 100%) and increasing the available standby 150% from 20% of existing capacity to the equivalent of 50% of current capacity.
Putting some numbers in (from the Internet so take em with a grain of salt); Soarin had a maximum ride capacity of 1,600 per hour which is about 19,000 riders per day. Adding a 3rd theater brings it to 2,400 per hour or 29,000 riders per day. That's on par with the capacity of SSE, Imagination and Seas in EPCOT and is about the same as the daily average attendance. If only 300 people an hour or less were going through the standby line and it typically averaged 60 min+ waits and they can increase that to one whole theater or 800 per hour it should decrease waits to under 30 mins standby on all but the most crowded days.
EDIT::: EPCOT needs to have a people-eater... if you cannot have omnimovers holding people off of the concrete outside, you rack-em' into queues
The x factor will be if a new movie comes with the expansion. A new movie could increase demand (at least temporally) enough to offset the added capacity.I agree with your math and find no way that the standby line will not decrees on must days. I would like to see the math from those that say it is not going to change. Also my gut feeling is that you can not increase capacity by 50% without a change in wait times.
The average Disney guest got bored with them and stopped riding. Epcot needs a people eater that people also want to ride over and over again.Horizons...World of Motion...please?...anyone?
With the exception of WoM the replacements for the older rides haven't proven to be that much more popular. Makes you wonder if ripping them out was the right decision over giving them proper updates.The average Disney guest got bored with them and stopped riding. Epcot needs a people eater that people also want to ride over and over again.
Both run at near max capacity on a daily basis and are fairly decent draws to the park. I don't know what more you could ask of them.With the exception of WoM the replacements for the older rides haven't proven to be that much more popular. Makes you wonder if ripping them out was the right decision over giving them proper updates.
I'm talking about Imagination and Mission: SPACE. One of them is always a walk on and basically empty while the other is also almost a walk on and never gets long waits except in the busiest of times.Both run at near max capacity on a daily basis and are fairly decent draws to the park. I don't know what more you could ask of them.
No one in their right mind could defend what has happened to the Imagination pavilion, but M:S is doing ok. I think Disney wanted it to be more popular, but the combination of too extreme for a Disney crowd and the lack of a decent post show has been the problem in making it more successful.I'm talking about Imagination and Mission: SPACE. One of them is always a walk on and basically empty while the other is also almost a walk on and never gets long waits except in the busiest of times.
The x factor will be if a new movie comes with the expansion. A new movie could increase demand (at least temporally) enough to offset the added capacity.
The average Disney guest got bored with them and stopped riding. Epcot needs a people eater that people also want to ride over and over again.
You are correct about GM and I believe their desire to change the attraction was due to low numbers. The sad reality is that thrill rides attract a lot more repeat riders than AA heavy masterpieces like WoM and Horizons.I'm not quite sure that was the cause of their closing. This is another conversation entirely, but in terms of World of Motion it was GM who made the call to make a thrill ride in its' place. And in my opinion "the average Disney guest" is content with Stitch's Great Escape. If Spaceship Earth wasn't housed inside the iconic geosphere and was located somewhere else in the park it probably would have gotten the axe as well. But SSE is a popular attraction to this day, and deservedly so. I think a Horizons/WoM omnimover is exactly what Epcot needs.
EDIT::: EPCOT needs to have a people-eater... if you cannot have omnimovers holding people off of the concrete outside, you rack-em' into queues
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