Scariest lifts to ride
DonaldMReif
12 Oct 2012
Lift Dinosaur, on 12 October 2012 - 08:53 AM, said:
While I don't have a vision of that span, I can tell you that if you want the haul rope closer to the ground, it's not going to be a combination tower unless it's almost as high as the current rope position. A combination assembly is generally a support assembly that in some load cases goes into compression. What you would need is a pure compression assembly, which we all know is a rough ride on a good day. You would also load Tower 25 to the point that it would need more sheaves or even another complete tower to accept the additional load. Plus, an additional tower is in the $45,000-$50,000 range.....
Close your eyes next time.

Dino
Never mind. I was considering the fact that I've dealt with howling winds and at least one or two slows on that point. When the wind's at 35, riding the upper part of the SuperConnect will have wind that really BITES hard. I guess the height thing is what makes that piece of the lift a little bit rattling. I always feel like I want to have the bar down on that segment. It doesn't seem to rattle me in the lower part of the lift, where the SuperConnect has no choice but to have really tall towers (towers 1, 2, and 3 because that's where you're crossing over the Beaver Run SuperChair, and towers 8-10 where you cross Lift C).
The Independence SuperChair also gets enough wind that I think it needs to be called the Indewindence SuperChair.
If someone's talked about the gaps in the towers on the lower part of Lift 6, please verify. That segment has towers where the span is such that there is a significant bouncing when you slow or stop and you are on that section of the line. Not so bad on the upper part, though.
I'm sure someone will argue that Mammoth's Chair 23 is a scary thing because it has such long gaps between tower spans.
And I do agree with that person who said Red Dog and Squaw Creek at Squaw Valley are scary on the sections with the offset towers. I've seen the photos. I can tell you I'd feel the same about Sublette at Jackson Hole.
I sometimes have feelings of extra steepness on the Santiago Express at Keystone. If I do have any anxieties on the Outback Express, it's when you look to your left at the top and you see how far away Dercum Mountain is (two miles in a straight line).
I've actually even had a few experiences with seeming scary rides at Winter Park. The Zephyr Express for one during the section where you're on the Hughes ridge, looking down on the Eskimo Express and Prospector Express pods to your right and Mary Jane to your left.
BerthoudAT
15 Feb 2013
At the risk of bumping an old thread.....also this is my first post, though I've had an account here for almost five years (I think).
I've been on a few of the lifts mentioned here; I think High Campbell at Crystal is far more intimidating than 7th Heaven at Stevens Pass, but I've been skiing 7th pretty regularly since I was a kid so its probably a familiarity thing. Zephyr at WP is scary because it feels old, and yeah it seems to really creak along that ridge near the top, but in general it isn't that bad. Wouldn't want to have to evac from it though. I don't see any of the Steamboat lifts being all that intimidating except the top of Morningside.
One that I'm surprised hasn't gotten any mention is the Ridge at Loveland (Chair 9) on a windy day--which are quite numerous at the Basin--is a nightmare. Its exposed, with no bar, and has a few high points that are less than desirable. The images here at .org don't do the top 1/3 of the lift justice.
Another CO lift that shouldn't seem that bad (but is, in my mind) is the Pano six-pack at Winter Park. It's a bit of a rodeo during emergency stops.
I've been on a few of the lifts mentioned here; I think High Campbell at Crystal is far more intimidating than 7th Heaven at Stevens Pass, but I've been skiing 7th pretty regularly since I was a kid so its probably a familiarity thing. Zephyr at WP is scary because it feels old, and yeah it seems to really creak along that ridge near the top, but in general it isn't that bad. Wouldn't want to have to evac from it though. I don't see any of the Steamboat lifts being all that intimidating except the top of Morningside.
One that I'm surprised hasn't gotten any mention is the Ridge at Loveland (Chair 9) on a windy day--which are quite numerous at the Basin--is a nightmare. Its exposed, with no bar, and has a few high points that are less than desirable. The images here at .org don't do the top 1/3 of the lift justice.
Another CO lift that shouldn't seem that bad (but is, in my mind) is the Pano six-pack at Winter Park. It's a bit of a rodeo during emergency stops.
DonaldMReif
15 Feb 2013
BerthoudAT, on 15 February 2013 - 02:02 AM, said:
At the risk of bumping an old thread.....also this is my first post, though I've had an account here for almost five years (I think).
I've been on a few of the lifts mentioned here; I think High Campbell at Crystal is far more intimidating than 7th Heaven at Stevens Pass, but I've been skiing 7th pretty regularly since I was a kid so its probably a familiarity thing. Zephyr at WP is scary because it feels old, and yeah it seems to really creak along that ridge near the top, but in general it isn't that bad. Wouldn't want to have to evac from it though. I don't see any of the Steamboat lifts being all that intimidating except the top of Morningside.
One that I'm surprised hasn't gotten any mention is the Ridge at Loveland (Chair 9) on a windy day--which are quite numerous at the Basin--is a nightmare. Its exposed, with no bar, and has a few high points that are less than desirable. The images here at .org don't do the top 1/3 of the lift justice.
Another CO lift that shouldn't seem that bad (but is, in my mind) is the Pano six-pack at Winter Park. It's a bit of a rodeo during emergency stops.
I've been on a few of the lifts mentioned here; I think High Campbell at Crystal is far more intimidating than 7th Heaven at Stevens Pass, but I've been skiing 7th pretty regularly since I was a kid so its probably a familiarity thing. Zephyr at WP is scary because it feels old, and yeah it seems to really creak along that ridge near the top, but in general it isn't that bad. Wouldn't want to have to evac from it though. I don't see any of the Steamboat lifts being all that intimidating except the top of Morningside.
One that I'm surprised hasn't gotten any mention is the Ridge at Loveland (Chair 9) on a windy day--which are quite numerous at the Basin--is a nightmare. Its exposed, with no bar, and has a few high points that are less than desirable. The images here at .org don't do the top 1/3 of the lift justice.
Another CO lift that shouldn't seem that bad (but is, in my mind) is the Pano six-pack at Winter Park. It's a bit of a rodeo during emergency stops.
Chairs swaying in the wind when these e-stops happen?
I always think the top part of the Peak 8 SuperConnect is a less than desirable ride whenever there's wind, which Breckenridge gets a lot of.
DonaldMReif
15 Feb 2013
bmr12, on 19 June 2008 - 07:47 PM, said:
A few chairs that have scared me:
All of these lifts have one of two characteristics that scare the crap out of me. Either they have what seem to be very large spans where the chairs are very high off the ground (seems like 100'; probably not quite that high), or they have chairs that feel like they are sloped toward dumping me out (Lift 9 & Loge Peak for sure). The old Jackson Hole tram and the tram up Lone Peak at Big Sky both are certainly intimidating for the rocks and and cliffs they traverse, but I never felt like it was trying to slide me out!
- Lift 9 at Telluride
- Loge Peak (maybe the old one?) at Aspen Highlands
- Some lift up high at Blackcomb (looks like Glacier express)--crosses some point at least 100' off the ground
- Sublette at Jackson Hole
All of these lifts have one of two characteristics that scare the crap out of me. Either they have what seem to be very large spans where the chairs are very high off the ground (seems like 100'; probably not quite that high), or they have chairs that feel like they are sloped toward dumping me out (Lift 9 & Loge Peak for sure). The old Jackson Hole tram and the tram up Lone Peak at Big Sky both are certainly intimidating for the rocks and and cliffs they traverse, but I never felt like it was trying to slide me out!
You're right about Glacier Express. remontees-mecaniques.net has some pictures on their galleries.
BerthoudAT
16 Feb 2013
DonaldMReif, on 15 February 2013 - 01:54 PM, said:
Chairs swaying in the wind when these e-stops happen?
I always think the top part of the Peak 8 SuperConnect is a less than desirable ride whenever there's wind, which Breckenridge gets a lot of.
^^Is truth. I think wind is just part of the deal on the divide. Even touring in Indian Peaks means subsisting on a wind diet.
I'm not sure if its wind per se with the Pano issue--the prevailing winds are head on to the lift rider on Pano. I know there's people at this forum who would know the technical term for it, but during e-stops the carriers seem to bounce a lot. Probably specific to a few of the spans and topography of the lift line. But again, this is all just perception on my behalf.
Since I"m already complaining about a new-ish feature lift at WP, I might consider lodging another--though I'm sure there is another thread for this too--I think the new alignment of Pano was a mistake. It adds a bunch of flat cruising terrain that the old double didn't have, and that skiers skiing that part of the mountain don't necessarily want.
boardski
16 Feb 2013
BerthoudAT, on 16 February 2013 - 12:37 AM, said:
^^Is truth. I think wind is just part of the deal on the divide. Even touring in Indian Peaks means subsisting on a wind diet.
I'm not sure if its wind per se with the Pano issue--the prevailing winds are head on to the lift rider on Pano. I know there's people at this forum who would know the technical term for it, but during e-stops the carriers seem to bounce a lot. Probably specific to a few of the spans and topography of the lift line. But again, this is all just perception on my behalf.
Since I"m already complaining about a new-ish feature lift at WP, I might consider lodging another--though I'm sure there is another thread for this too--I think the new alignment of Pano was a mistake. It adds a bunch of flat cruising terrain that the old double didn't have, and that skiers skiing that part of the mountain don't necessarily want.
I'm not sure if its wind per se with the Pano issue--the prevailing winds are head on to the lift rider on Pano. I know there's people at this forum who would know the technical term for it, but during e-stops the carriers seem to bounce a lot. Probably specific to a few of the spans and topography of the lift line. But again, this is all just perception on my behalf.
Since I"m already complaining about a new-ish feature lift at WP, I might consider lodging another--though I'm sure there is another thread for this too--I think the new alignment of Pano was a mistake. It adds a bunch of flat cruising terrain that the old double didn't have, and that skiers skiing that part of the mountain don't necessarily want.
The major problem with Panoramic is the exposure above timberline forcing it to be closed many days this year due to high winds. Before they installed that chair, WP had a forum on their website and many of us expressed our concerns and alternative suggestions but they went ahead anyway. The thinned-out gladed trails are actually pretty fun but if it was up to me, I would have installed a HSQ running from the bottom of Pano to the timberline (approx tower #18) and lift Timberline there for the actual bowl. That way, the lower lift could almost always run and Sunnyside would not have such a huge mob at the bottom. Maybe they can figure out something to at least alleviate the Sunnyside mob in the coming seasons.
Anyhow, back to the original topic. after a windy day at Loveland today which had me holding onto the back of the chair on lift #9, I would have to agree rides up this lift on windy days can be a bit "hair-raising". It does keep the lines short on busy days though.
DonaldMReif
21 Feb 2013
boardski, on 16 February 2013 - 08:01 PM, said:
The major problem with Panoramic is the exposure above timberline forcing it to be closed many days this year due to high winds. Before they installed that chair, WP had a forum on their website and many of us expressed our concerns and alternative suggestions but they went ahead anyway. The thinned-out gladed trails are actually pretty fun but if it was up to me, I would have installed a HSQ running from the bottom of Pano to the timberline (approx tower #18) and lift Timberline there for the actual bowl. That way, the lower lift could almost always run and Sunnyside would not have such a huge mob at the bottom. Maybe they can figure out something to at least alleviate the Sunnyside mob in the coming seasons.
Anyhow, back to the original topic. after a windy day at Loveland today which had me holding onto the back of the chair on lift #9, I would have to agree rides up this lift on windy days can be a bit "hair-raising". It does keep the lines short on busy days though.
Anyhow, back to the original topic. after a windy day at Loveland today which had me holding onto the back of the chair on lift #9, I would have to agree rides up this lift on windy days can be a bit "hair-raising". It does keep the lines short on busy days though.
I think Chair 9 would be less "hair-raising" if it had safety bars.
boardski
21 Feb 2013
liftmech
22 Feb 2013
NoPainNoJane
22 Feb 2013
Being between towers 9 & 10 on One at Vail during a stop can give you a good bounce, easily 25-30 ft.
TRosenbaum
01 Mar 2013
Red Dog at Squaw. There is a huge dropoff that comes up suddenly.
DonaldMReif
02 Mar 2013
NoPainNoJane, on 22 February 2013 - 07:42 PM, said:
Being between towers 9 & 10 on One at Vail during a stop can give you a good bounce, easily 25-30 ft.
Hopefully Vail might think to add an additional tower there. I think part of it is because the Vista Bahn was much closer to the ground and followed the terrain.
Conrad
02 Mar 2013
There definitely are scarier lifts out there, but the Jordan Mountain Double at Sunday River is high enough to make me queasy.



liftmech
02 Mar 2013
DonaldMReif, on 02 March 2013 - 10:44 AM, said:
Hopefully Vail might think to add an additional tower there. I think part of it is because the Vista Bahn was much closer to the ground and followed the terrain.
This is also posted in another topic, but you don't just 'add' a tower unless you do some re-engineering.
DonaldMReif
03 Mar 2013
Conrad, on 02 March 2013 - 01:29 PM, said:
There definitely are scarier lifts out there, but the Jordan Mountain Double at Sunday River is high enough to make me queasy.




I'm sure they could have used less steel with shorter towers. Would have saved them a lot of money at original construction. Those towers are unnecessarily high. Don't see any justification.
I've never been on Resolution at Copper, but that last climb looks a bit scary since there aren't safety bars on that lift.
Parts of me also want to say that the top part of the Independence SuperChair counts because it's very windy there. Actually, any heavily wind exposed lift counts.
boardski
03 Mar 2013
The seat on each chair on those early to mid 80s Poma chairs such as Reso at Copper and Lift 8 at Purgatory are shorter and the backs are lower also. This adds a little to the thrill. I am glad Poma changed their chair design enough beginning in '86 to make the chairs more comfortable.
To respond to the prior photographs, how do they haul those towers to the ski area? I've wondered the same about tower #9 on the Morningside lift at Steamboat,CO. I wouldn't recommend being in the right lane when that truck turns.
This post has been edited by boardski: 03 March 2013 - 04:50 PM
To respond to the prior photographs, how do they haul those towers to the ski area? I've wondered the same about tower #9 on the Morningside lift at Steamboat,CO. I wouldn't recommend being in the right lane when that truck turns.
This post has been edited by boardski: 03 March 2013 - 04:50 PM
skier2
03 Mar 2013
boardski, on 03 March 2013 - 04:48 PM, said:
The seat on each chair on those early to mid 80s Poma chairs such as Reso at Copper and Lift 8 at Purgatory are shorter and the backs are lower also. This adds a little to the thrill. I am glad Poma changed their chair design enough beginning in '86 to make the chairs more comfortable.
To respond to the prior photographs, how do they haul those towers to the ski area? I've wondered the same about tower #9 on the Morningside lift at Steamboat,CO. I wouldn't recommend being in the right lane when that truck turns.
To respond to the prior photographs, how do they haul those towers to the ski area? I've wondered the same about tower #9 on the Morningside lift at Steamboat,CO. I wouldn't recommend being in the right lane when that truck turns.
Towers are now generally split into two or even three parts which are then bolted together on-site. In the past, some companies would weld towers in the parking lots of the resorts getting the install (Yan comes to mind, possibly also VonRoll)
ceo
07 Mar 2013
vons
07 Mar 2013
Money, it is more cost effective to span a valley than bend the line down into it and then out of it... I think this concept came up in a ski lift safety topic.
This post has been edited by vons: 07 March 2013 - 04:52 PM
This post has been edited by vons: 07 March 2013 - 04:52 PM