liftmech, on Jun 4 2008, 05:54 PM, said:
One aspect that I feel gets overlooked when comparing detachables to fixed lifts is that, even at the same uphill capacity, a detachable lift puts more people on the slopes than a fixed-grip lift.
Here is a simplistic example.
In the late 1990s, Mt. Hood Meadows in Oregon replaced its Shooting Star fixed quad with a detachable quad. The fixed quad had a carrying capacity of 1,800 people per hour. The new detachable has the exact same capacity -- 1,800 people per hour.
In this simplistic model, pretend that there are 500 guests in this Shooting Star lift/trail "pod" at some random point in time.
With the fixed quad, 141 quad chairs were on the lift. So, assuming the lift was at capacity, there would be 280 people on the lift (70 uphill carriers seating 4 people each). With 500 guests in the pod, 280 would be "stored" on the lift at any given time (for an 8-minute ride), while the other 220 would be either on the runs or in the lift line.
With the new detachable quad, only 69 quad carriers are on the lift. So, again assuming the lift is at capacity, there are 136 people on the lift (34 uphill carriers seating 4 people each). Again, with 500 guests in the pod, 136 people are "stored" on the lift at any given time (for a 4-minute ride), while the remaining 364 people are either on the runs or in the lift line.
As you can see... despite the exact same carrying capacity of 1,800 people per hour, the detachable quad puts far more guests on the runs than the fixed quad did. In this example:
Fixed quad -- 280 on the lift, 220 on the runs (or in the liftline)
Detachable quad -- 136 on the lift, 364 on the runs (or in the liftline).
Plus, since the ride time for guests on the detachable quad is approximate half that of the fixed quad, more guests are able to do more "laps" in the pod over the course of the day with the detachable. This increased lapping obviously takes a toll on the trails' snow surface.
Ski areas have to do this kind of calculation when weighing their decision to replace a fixed-grip lift with a detachable. It's not just simply about uphill lift capacity... the lifts' "storage" capacity also needs to be considered. Fixed quads "store" more people on the lift at any given point in time than detachables do. And the guests who are not "stored" on the chair are on the trails... so ski areas must evaluate if the trail pod is capable of handling the increased traffic before they commit to a detachable upgrade.
This post has been edited by skihood: 04 June 2008 - 07:45 PM