

1st Hsq In World Found!
Started by coskibum, Nov 08 2003 04:05 PM
71 replies to this topic
#44
Posted 27 November 2003 - 10:11 AM
Another picture of the lift.
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doppelmayr.jpg (65.95K)
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- Cameron
#52
Posted 28 November 2003 - 03:25 PM
Conveyor chains were the first method of moving chairs around the contour, as Cameron noted. I don't know how maintenance-intensive Doppelmayr's are, but Poma's take a week per terminal to work on in the summer. Then there's the small problem of the cadencing system being a 'passive' system, instead of the more modern 'active' tyre banks. A passive system means that the chair comes into the terminal and either is caught by the chain or not. An active system, on the other hand, constantly fine-tunes the spacing of the carriers as they come through, eliminating (or almost) chair collisions.
Member, Department of Ancient Technology, Colorado chapter.
#57
Posted 15 March 2004 - 05:46 AM
The chain spacing system on the older Doppelmayrs like at Vail looks pretty simple. The chair is caught by two sort of hook things that are spaced out as far as the distance between the chairs should be. The chains catch the chair. But what would happen if one of them missed the chain hooks and the next one crashed into it?
- Tyler
West Palm Beach, FL - elev. 9 feet
West Palm Beach, FL - elev. 9 feet
#58
Posted 15 March 2004 - 09:58 AM
We discussed this a while back with the POMA Angel terminals. If the lift operator was able to see that the chair missed and stopped the lift in time, he would be able to put it on the rail, but if he missed , well there would be a problem. Doppelmayr's seem not to have this problem from what I have seen.
- Cameron
#60
Posted 16 March 2004 - 04:13 PM
SkiBachelor, on Mar 15 2004, 12:58 PM, said:
We discussed this a while back with the POMA Angel terminals. If the lift operator was able to see that the chair missed and stopped the lift in time, he would be able to put it on the rail, but if he missed , well there would be a problem. Doppelmayr's seem not to have this problem from what I have seen.
Do you mean he would put it on the maintainance rail and put it back next time the spot came around, or push it back into the chains that it missed?
- Tyler
West Palm Beach, FL - elev. 9 feet
West Palm Beach, FL - elev. 9 feet
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