Posted 30 July 2007 - 05:59 PM
I guess I'll add my $0.02 to this topic, I always use mine. I've skied almost exclusivley in the east, and there are very few chairs without safety bars, the only ones that come to mind are the Ski Baba Borvig double at mt. snow and if i'm not mistaken the old home-built mixing bowl chair at mt. snow. Both of these are short and low to the ground.
I'm also a former ski coach, I taught for 6 years at Stratton. So, use of the safety bar was required if I had kids on the lift, and since I coached Jr. Freestyle, I always had kids with me. One of the big reasons to use the safety bar is with the high speed lifts. As most of you probably know, Stratton has 4 high speed 6-packs. We were instructed not to open the safety bar at the top terminal until the chair had slowed. (none of the hs6's have footrests). The reason for this is that the deceleration actually threw a kid off of one of the lifts. The kid survived thankfully, but had some injuries. Whether the safety bar could have prevented it is debatable, but it really could have helped.
Personally now, I ski primarily at Mad River Glen, all the lifts have safety bars and I, along with almost everyone else use them. The safety aspect is pretty worthless though on the single, as you push the bar forward to release it, but I like the footrest.
I've got another one too, where the safety bar could have helped. It occurred probably close to 20 years ago at Belleayre Mtn in NY when the triple chair was originally installed, though I have no idea if the chair is still there. Anyway, what happened was the takeoff was too steep, add that with bumping the chair, three grown men were on one chair and it swung back far enough after the first towers to make all three of them fall off. I think the safety bar definatly could have helped in that situation.
Now, if I go out west, i'm not going to avoid chairs with no bars on them, I'd love to go to Alta, but if you're on a lift with one, use it, it really does have some safety benefits. Sorry for the long post.