Backbowlsbilly, on 28 May 2014 - 07:37 PM, said:
The cabriolet seems like less of a mountain addition then it is a real estate addition because after you take it, you have to walk through the Village and past all of the shops and through all of their real estate. If they built it to that location between Arrow and Gemini, nobody would walk through the village because they could just take the lift instead. Intrawest tends to build their mountains around cabriolets or with some cabriolet element in them (Winter Park, Tremblant, Panorama Mountain Village) and it technically makes them able to say that they have a gondola.
Steamboat sounds like the one exception, since they have a regular gondola, albeit the gondola has been around since 1986, a full 20 years before Intrawest showed up. They also have that pulse gondola.
snoloco, on 29 May 2014 - 11:50 AM, said:
One of Intrawest's former resorts which was Mountain Creek has a cabriolet going to the top of the mountain. They advertised it as the only gondola in NJ for quite a while even though the Skyway at Six Flags Great Adventure is a gondola. At first I questioned the installation since it requires you to remove skis and stand for the entire trip. However, when they did away with the Park Pass at South (which is all terrain parks), that lift kept slowing and stopping every single ride and then I realized just how great the Cabriolet Gondola is on Vernon Peak. It almost never stops. Had they built that thing as a 6-pack, it would stop more than it ran, or it would need to be turned down to like 600 fpm because no one would be able to load it without falling. Half the time I look at the Sugar Quad from The Cabriolet, it is stopped, and it only runs at 350 fpm at full speed. Mountain Creek gets a ton of beginners, so their lifts either run slow, or stop all the time. The Granite Peak Quad is rated for 2.4 m/s which is about 475 fpm. It is usually run at 450 fpm, especially on the weekends. On a few busy days I have seen it run full speed, once it stopped 4 times on the way up.
The Six Flags Great Adventure skyway is bye-bye, last I heard.