

Questionable Lift Installations
#1
Posted 15 May 2014 - 01:40 PM
Although I have never skied Keystone, it seems odd that the Ruby Express, which serves only three runs, 2 of which are black diamonds is a 6-pack. It seems hard to justify a 6-pack there based on the map, but maybe crowds during the afternoon when everyone is coming from the North Peak and Outback back to the main mountain justifies it.
The Shooting Star Express at Stratton is definitely underutilized, but I think that they wanted a 6-pack because it would equal the capacity of the Sunrise Express which ends where it begins.
The Zephyr Express at Hunter is located on an inconvenient line where you need to skate to in at the bottom and from it at the top. It replaced 2 double chairs. I wonder why they didn't put it on the line that was more convenient for skiers.
#3
Posted 15 May 2014 - 06:39 PM
SkiDaBird, on 15 May 2014 - 02:11 PM, said:
That was pre-Olympics overzealousness. Great lift, though!
I'd add:
(1) Super Bee at Copper could probably have been a HSQ, though I'm sure the added weight of 6-pack chairs is helpful on windy days;
(2) I really don't like the configuration of Christie Express at Steamboat. I think a HSQ running up the original Christie II lifeline and a separate beginner HSQ would have better served the area;
(3) The majority of the lifts near the Park City terrain at Canyons as configured under ASC.
Re: Ruby Express, it serves as a "wayback" lift (not to be confused with the actual Wayback Lift) for anyone skiing the backside of Keystone so that one definitely makes sense.
#4
Posted 15 May 2014 - 07:08 PM
Liftblog.com
#5
Posted 15 May 2014 - 09:31 PM
skier2, on 15 May 2014 - 06:39 PM, said:
I'd add:
(1) Super Bee at Copper could probably have been a HSQ, though I'm sure the added weight of 6-pack chairs is helpful on windy days;
(2) I really don't like the configuration of Christie Express at Steamboat. I think a HSQ running up the original Christie II lifeline and a separate beginner HSQ would have better served the area;
(3) The majority of the lifts near the Park City terrain at Canyons as configured under ASC.
Re: Ruby Express, it serves as a "wayback" lift (not to be confused with the actual Wayback Lift) for anyone skiing the backside of Keystone so that one definitely makes sense.
It's a great lift to ski off of, I'm just saying a HSQ would have worked fine. Definitely agree with the Canyons lifts though. Might be able to add Honeycomb at Solitude to the list seeing as in years of skiing there, I have never seen a line and it's a quad. Although 4 minutes isn't enough for your legs after a good run back there so a faster double wouldn't be any fun...
#6
Posted 15 May 2014 - 10:24 PM
skier2, on 15 May 2014 - 06:39 PM, said:
I'd add:
(1) Super Bee at Copper could probably have been a HSQ, though I'm sure the added weight of 6-pack chairs is helpful on windy days;
(2) I really don't like the configuration of Christie Express at Steamboat. I think a HSQ running up the original Christie II lifeline and a separate beginner HSQ would have better served the area;
(3) The majority of the lifts near the Park City terrain at Canyons as configured under ASC.
Re: Ruby Express, it serves as a "wayback" lift (not to be confused with the actual Wayback Lift) for anyone skiing the backside of Keystone so that one definitely makes sense.
The Wayback lift does the same thing the Ruby Express lift does. It moves people from the Outback back to North Peak. Arguably it should be a high speed quad instead of a fixed grip quad since the only other two lifts in this area are the Santiago Express and Outback Express lifts, which are high speed quads. That's actually in Keystone's master plan.
I always considered the old Colorado SuperChair at Peak 8, itself a high speed quad, as sometimes inadequate for Breckenridge's crowds, especially after the resort transferred the official center of mountain activity over to Peak 8 from Peak 9. Hopefully the high speed six pack that it is going to be replaced with next ski season will relieve some of those crowds.
The Kensho SuperChair on Peak 6 probably could've been a high speed quad, but I think that, just like the reasons that snoloco states may have been what led Copper Mountain to build the Super Bee lift as a six pack, they went with a high speed six pack because they wanted heavier chairs for windy days. The lines for the most part tend to be somewhat short and never burst out of the queue ropes on the times I went up Peak 6 this season. Since I often went to Peak 6 first thing in the morning when staying at Grand Lodge on Peak 7 (given convenient access to the Independence SuperChair), lines tend to be very short at Peak 6 at 8:50 AM.
Zendo's okay for its location. The only thing I sometimes wish had been done for it on the master plan would have been for it to be a high speed quad, starting at the bottom of the Independence SuperChair, have a turn and midway station where the real fixed grip quad begins, then have a final leg to the actual unload area. This would have allowed for direct access from Peak 7 base to the Kensho SuperChair in a single lift ride without needing to use the Independence SuperChair, while allowing people to travel from the Rocky Mountain SuperChair directly to Peak 6 without having to go to Peak 7 base. At the very least, Breckenridge should have had another lift that ran from the bottom of Wirepatch to about the junction of Wirepatch and Peak 6 Parkway to provide access to the Peak 7 Road, an alternate cutoff to get to Claimjumper and Peak 8 base, and relieve traffic on that icy last hill.
https://www.youtube....TimeQueenOfRome
#7
Posted 16 May 2014 - 01:59 AM
Peter, on 15 May 2014 - 07:08 PM, said:
#8
Posted 16 May 2014 - 05:50 AM
You can tell that the Needle's Eye lift was built as cheaply as possible. They shortened the route, used compact Challenger terminals instead of full length ones which results in 900 fpm vs. 1,100 fpm, and it is a bottom drive while the lift it replaced was a top drive (although that doesn't affect the lift ride itself).
The Ramshead Express installed the same year is also a bottom drive although the lift it replaced was too. It was also shorter than the double which abandoned a bunch of terrain at the top of the mountain. It has full length terminals (unlike Needle's Eye) and is rated for 1,100 fpm although they only run it at 800 fpm due to high volumes of beginners.
This post has been edited by snoloco: 16 May 2014 - 05:57 AM
#9
Posted 23 May 2014 - 07:15 AM
#10
Posted 23 May 2014 - 08:40 AM
I guess Zendo is very practical for its location because its uphill capacity is lower than that of the Independence SuperChair and the Kensho SuperChair (Zendo is 1,800 pph, and the Kensho SuperChair has a 3,000 pph capacity), meaning Zendo controls the rate at which newcomers are fed into the Kensho SuperChair.
I think the Purgatory Village Express was really just built as a six pack for show purposes.
https://www.youtube....TimeQueenOfRome
#11
Posted 23 May 2014 - 10:22 AM
Also, spending so much on it seems to have taken money away from other lifts that could have added significant terrain. It would be a much better mountain now if the money had been spent developing the new base near Function Junction (dealing better with Vancouver traffic) or putting lifts from Creekside up to West Bowl. Even putting a three stage chair down, across and up the same route as the P2P would have cost much less, opened terrain and added lift capacity.
Basically it is pretty, but pretty useless also.
TME
This post has been edited by teachme: 23 May 2014 - 10:23 AM
#12
Posted 23 May 2014 - 11:12 AM
#13
Posted 23 May 2014 - 11:12 AM
https://www.youtube....TimeQueenOfRome
#14
Posted 23 May 2014 - 01:13 PM
teachme, on 23 May 2014 - 10:22 AM, said:
Also, spending so much on it seems to have taken money away from other lifts that could have added significant terrain. It would be a much better mountain now if the money had been spent developing the new base near Function Junction (dealing better with Vancouver traffic) or putting lifts from Creekside up to West Bowl. Even putting a three stage chair down, across and up the same route as the P2P would have cost much less, opened terrain and added lift capacity.
Basically it is pretty, but pretty useless also.
TME
Personally, I found Peak 2 Peak to be a really useful lift when I skied W-B in 2009. I was staying in a hotel just above the bottom of Wizard Express, and so usually I would ride up on Blackcomb and then transfer to Whistler Mountain on Peak 2 Peak. Also, at the end of the day, I would ride it back to Blackcomb and just ski right down to the hotel. I do remember thinking how much harder transferring between the mountains would have been had it not been built. The other thing to keep in mind is that the weather and snow is not always great on the lower 1,500 feet, so by staying up higher the skiers can avoid the sometimes poor snow at the bottom.
#15
Posted 23 May 2014 - 10:04 PM
#16
Posted 24 May 2014 - 04:45 PM
Probably shouldn't be slagging my own mountain, but I'm not a fan of our new Celebrity Ridge platter. Many thousands of dollars to eliminate a 3-minute hike. If we had put that lift down where we're currently rebuilding the old Storm King, it would have been money well spent. $0.02
#18
Posted 24 May 2014 - 11:43 PM
liftmech, on 24 May 2014 - 04:45 PM, said:
Probably shouldn't be slagging my own mountain, but I'm not a fan of our new Celebrity Ridge platter. Many thousands of dollars to eliminate a 3-minute hike. If we had put that lift down where we're currently rebuilding the old Storm King, it would have been money well spent. $0.02
Was it just to make the area more appealing for tourists? I'v noticed that hike to terrain and long traverses are pretty much used exclusively by locals.
#19
Posted 25 May 2014 - 11:15 AM
The only real benefit I can see in it is for marketing.
TME
#20
Posted 25 May 2014 - 05:23 PM
SkiDaBird, on 24 May 2014 - 11:43 PM, said:
Your guess is as good as mine.
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